Gleaner_19510507

J
t Vol. XXVI
•
Your Agenda
MAY 9-
May Ooy
Sider-Cia.u Benqueh
MAY IG-Nwru~ Ceppin9
MAY 11~11-Senior Art Ea;hibH
JUNE 2-Senlor Day of Rec:otlectlon (9 a.m.)
JUNE l-
8.uulau.r .. te (9:30 a.m.)
Resident Studenk' Dinner (6 p.m.)
JUNE 4-
Junior-Senior BruUut ( I I :lO•.rn.)
Movin9-Up Dey Exercises P p.m.)
Faculty-Senior Dinner ( 6 p.m.)
JUNES-Neshman-
Stnior luncheon ( 12 :30 p.m.)
Clan Dey bercises {l p.m.)
JUNE 6--
Perent-Senior luncheo" ( 12 p.m.)
Commencement (4 p.m.)
Senior Ball
Student Officers Share Info
•
Next year'> offic~rs wtll be w~IJ oriented aft~r th~ splendid
officers training program that has ~n planned for the year.
As is u<ual, the incoming and outgoing officers will meet
with tl>e ( nculty memhers to d iscuss problems and make plans
for the following year. The meeting is scheduled for May 8
at 7 o'clock. All faculty members and the old and new officers
of undor~t<Jd, clas:le$. clubs, and publications are cordially invited
to attend.
In •dduton to this morntnR, class and club treasurers will be
bri~fed ahout the new • J>prorriarion system.
It is a tribute to the judgment and understanding o f facu lty
and students a I ike that such 3 meeting as this can be held on our
umpu>. It ts concrete proof of the worhhility of cooperative
uudcnt government.
•
M~ PIUUHOie 'k/Mki Ro4a!Uf
The Fremin Mission Unit of Nazareth Col­lege.
as its final project for the year 1950-1951,
is distl'ibut ing one of .Msgr. Fulton J. Sheen's
World Mission Rosaries to each s tudent and
faculty member, both religious and full-time lay
members of the college.
In carrying out this project. the Fremin
Uission Unit is endeavoring to s t imulate in its
members t he prayerful zeal so essential to
Mission woc·k everywhere.
The World Miss ion Rosary recently intro­duced
by Msgr. Sheen in his radio broadcasts,
is designed to inspire prayer for the mission
fields of the five continents. Each decade is of
a di fferent color. The green decade is to be
offered foe· the missions of Africa, s ince green
symbolizes the color of its fores ts and the sa­cred
colo•- of the Moslems for whose conversion
we pray. Red is Ame•-ica's, symbolizing the
Red men who first fou nded the continent.
White is for Europe whose s piJ·itual capital is
Rome and whos.! white Shepherd is the Holy
Father. Blue 111arks Australia and all the
ntber islruuls of the blue Pacific. YeUow sym­bolizes
the morning li~tht of the East which
was the cradle of wol'ld civilization. The in -
troductory beads are in white because these
m11yers are offered for the Holy Father_
Thus in the five decades. the petitioner cov­ets
two worlds : the spidtual world of either
the Joyful, Sorrowful. or Glorious Myste ries of
Our Lord, and the !>hysical world of the five
r~'ltinen ts.
Monday, May 7, 1951
•
• Nurses Get Their Caps
Next Thursda,• at 7. p. m. the
freshman nurses will each place the
Cind ie that represents her life he·
fore the shrine of Mary, rake thP
nurse's pledge and be garbed in the
r ... rl itional nurse's cap.
MAY-JUNE
BULLETIN BOARD
•
MAY DAY HONORS QUEEN
The annual Ma)' Da)· in honot· of the Qufi'n or Heaven
and Queen of Nazareth will be celebrated on the coUege
campu$ on Wednesday,' May 9.
The day will lx!gin at 9 o'clock with Mass cclcbt·ated by
Bishop Ketu·ncy. The studcn~ body will lhcn JIUt·ticipate in
a procession to \'i&it the li"ing shrine~ set up nt vut'ious
points on the gt·ounds. The theme of the sht·incs, chosen in
ae<ord with Monoignor Sheen's plea for pence through
prayer, is Our Lad)• of the Nations. The Fteohmnn shrine
will porll'R)' Out· Lady in Africa: Sophomot.,, Our Lady in
Europe; Junio1·, Out· Lady in Occnnica; Senior, Om· Lady in
the Amel'icas; the Sodality, Ouo· Lady in Asia. The lllOt"ing
ucth•ities will close- with Benediction.
The :!.lay Queen ;<nd her court will pt'eside at the a(U,r­noon
festivities, s!Jlrting at 2 o'clock. The attendants Me:
Put Millecan, Anne Gauer, Jean Mullen, Mm·y Jo F'itzgemld,
Janet Davis, and Joan Reichart. The identity or the Queen
is withheld until her actual appeoo·nnce on this nftcrnoon.
Alter being entertained by the May-Pole dancers the
Prineess Mtr1'• Pa~:e, a ranuosy by Edna St. Vincent Milia)',
will be presented. Mary Augusta Asnm will portray the
princess, while the page will be played by Ann Hanna. Re­freshments
will follow, ending tho pt-ogJ-am !or the day.
ln c.hat'gc of eommitteeH ure: Hononu·y Chuh·mnn1 Mary
Ellen Cullen: Cene•·al Chuio·nwn , Janet Davis; Spiritual
Chait·ruun, Mary Ann Donovan: Reception. Katherine Cor.,a:
Attendants, Bernadette Sentner; Procession, Patricia McWil­liams:
Deconltion, llary Shulte: Flowers, ltos~mory Riley:
Pageant, Joan 'MOOI''e; Costum~&, Leona Meitsentahl; Pl"opc•· ..
ties, Jeanne Ma de Goodspeed; Mus ic, Helen Kodf; May Pole
Dunce, Albn Musson; Pa·ograms, Rose Ann Chioppone: An·
nouncements, Emma Lungo: Publicity. Josephine FriRicuno;
ReCreshmenta, Mary Louise !'ike; Pietures, Kathr)'ll Currnn:
General Order, Mary Lou Broderick.
The origin of the professional e
r>urse's cap may be laid ro fashion.
Florence Nightingale, the mother
of modern secular nursing. orobabl"
wore a CIP because no well·dressed
~'n~~;lish lady of the Victorian oeri.--'
(Pit properly groomed without •n
~legant head decoration. Today th~
cap distinguishes th~ nurse as snrh
and iden tities her as n graduate of
• particu lar school. •
• • Senior Art Maiors Show Work
The Annual Senior Art Exhibit will displav
the nchie,·ements of the senior art maiors for
three days beginning Frida\' - Mav 11 . Students
"'~ welcome to altend the exhibit during th•
rluv. TI1c senior clussmates of the artists wi ll
hr viven a ~pecial reception from 2 to 5 I>· m ..
. nl'flAv. May 13. in the Art De1>artment.
\l~mber.s of the Art Departntent Class of '51
H~· l••tt Ci•ternino. Rochester; Mar~~:aret Cola·
4'·inn \cw~trk: ~larv Ann Caeuzlcr. Rocl1r-.::rpr•
Be•uicc r.uerreiro. Honolulu : Mul'innne Hoff·
" 'a• tcr. Hochestcr: Mary Ther•sa O'Connoll.
Trumnushurl!: Helen Stenl!el. Albany.
AHH HANNA MoUY AUGUSTA A$NA ''-OitlHCE DEL ROSSO
•
Sr. Margaret Mary
To Represent College
Sr. Margaret Mary will repre­sent
the collegiate nursing school
at a meeting of the Hospital Asso­ciation
of New York State to be
held at Atlantic City, May 25.
The theme of the meeting i• "The
Future of Nursing."
The main portion of the confer·
ence will consist of • panel dis·
cussion at which Sr. Ma rgaret
Mary will speak.
2
- !<mp n SIIJJIII!t r Jlnrvest -
Summer's a grcnt lime. Got to catch up on friends
(masculine gandct· understood). smooth a l·eautiful sun tan
all over, s leep, have fun, have fun, sleep, work, sleep, sleep,
ad infinituM. Wh ile the intent student is gazing with wrin­kled
brow at the diag1·am, the pt·ofessor may be pleased
to note that het· mind is undoubtedly surveying the glories
of vac::ttion. Thus to the topic at hand.
We hnve to recuperate from the rigors of school. no
doubt al:out il. But we can accomplish some other thing5
too. Whether we know it or not, college is training our will.
We 11hould have {:leaned froM this year a love of the Mass.
the hnbit of chnrity, the desire to i·c an aposl'e to l'·e wo•·ld
that needs us. Summer's the chance to use tllis training.
We can get to know the people of the parish, help our own
family more than usual, spend some time doing concrete
things for our neighbors.
Did you cvet· think of r aking out a schedule for the
summet·? A •·ough plan of things to be accomplished--a
project for each week (e.g., a play to be read, room to be
done ove1·, people t!> visit). reminders for each day (Mass,
ment..\1 Jlrayet·, en·ands and such added as they come up)­can
keep the summe1· from slipping by and leaving nothing
in its wake but a few sun blisters.
Few exams and happy summer to you all!
THE GLEANER
NAZARETH COLLEGE
Publication Office: ANTIIONY KLEE CORI'ORATION
165 ST. !'AUt .• STREET
Vol. XXVI Monday, May 7, 1951 No. 7
l'ublished Monthly
l)y the Students of Nazareth College
Rochester, New York
l·:ditor-in-Chier JANE YVONNE KOENEN
Associate EditorR' ROS~:MARY WALJti;H, MARY H. BROWN
lluoincss Mnnugc1· ANNE lllEDl\!AN
STAF'F-M:ll'il)'~l Rcitc•·, .Alice Bucholtz, l'al•·icia c• .. ,edon, J eanne
Orexehus, Jeon Schcg. Corol Baggerly.
THe GLEANER
Poland Shows
The Way
Tod"y i• the reast or St.
Stnnlslaus, 1>at1·on saint. or Po·
htnd. This eJe>vcnlh century mar­tyr
was killed for l'CJ)ronehing
King Boleslas II for his diosolutc
life. 1L seem• th:ot todny Polnnd
is n •·eproach to the whole wol'ld
ro•· its abandonment or Chl'istian
rthics, and it is being morty•·cd
by Communist. dominnlion.
Jloland is the rnfH1:)fJ' country
or Eu•-ope, pnyin!f with i~ blood
ror the atheism, immorality, mn·
l~J·inliom that hilA flooded the
continent. Wo• Catholics mutt pay
with self-imposed sacrifices for
the sins of the wo1·ld. This is
the plan or God mnde manifut
to us by the modtm npparitiona
or th~ Blessed Virgin.
The month or May should be
a special rt'mindor I<> us or this
obligation or sneriflee. We must
otrer ench day :md every minuw
of the day for the glory or God:
we- must deny oursplves pleR.BUt'el
and do His will. For us student&
this means pnying attention in
class, e,·en nt three-thirty, study­ing
when we'd 1·nther sit in the
Mission Room nnd talk, being
cheer(ul and uncomplninins,r dur­ing
exams, loughin~t nnd pluying
wholehearwdly. We mu•t be to·
dlll''S joyful martyrs:.
Monday, May 7, 1951
Senior Profile z.n Review ...
Every class has a personality of its ow11. Its reaction
to problems, its participation in activities, its methods of
working nnd getting wo1·k done-these are unique with
each group that )>nsses along Nazareth's halls. One of the
faculty has said that a college collects knowledge because
the freshmen bl'ing a little in and no one ever takes any out.
The senioi'S this year seem to be an exception to the rule.
\Ve who have known you ha,·e seen you grow during your
college years and seen you accumulate a wisdom that dis·
plays itself in whatever you do. You have had many diffi·
culties to face. Calmly you ha\'e looked at each one, and
walked on with little disturbance. We'd almost accuse you
of being the "grave, old seniot-s" but it is an established
facl that you're the most light-heartedly gay people in the
college.
Vive Saint Jude!
It's morP than just a standing joke that the Class of
'51 can pt·ay anything into being. You've taken your class
patron and really made him work for you and you've worked
for him. There's not a girl in the school who hasn't been
made conscious of St. Jude.
All this bes(>eaks a right ordering of th ings, the precious
touch that seniors add to college life. This year's group '
has not only taken things in theit· pro)>er place, but they
have ~rone about their work swiftly and quietly. The almost
paradox of pep and calm assurance is the special mark of
'51. As individuals may you keep first things fit·st all your
life and may you work with the joy and strength of Chl'ist '
that you have acquired at Nazareth.
From the Ridiculous -
Now that your job-hunting has begun in earnest we of :
the under·classes look a bit wistfully in your direction. We
wonder what we'll be doing a year or so from now. We take
a second, deeper glance at our present life to see if we're
using il to the fullest. We suspect that there are worlds of
thought and activity of which we have not the slightest ink· '
ling yet.
But there's another reason for ou1· thoughtfulness. You
see, you'll be missed at Nazareth. It won't be the voluble
kind of missing that says, "Oh, 1 wish so-and-so were here."
It'll simply be the feeling that things aren't quite as they '
were. Every once in a while we'll look for one of you in the
hall to talk things over with, and then laugh at out· fo•·get­fulness.
Now we'd like to reverse the order of things and will you
sorne items to catTy oft' to your new life. As a favot· we
ask that you take a bundle of exams with you. Give them
to your classes-anything, just so long as we have fewer
a•·ound here! We suggest that the boarders take a handful i
of ladybugs to decrease the population, and that the biology J
majors gather u(> any stray fruit flies. Will the English 1
majors please remember something- anything- just so
long as "you remember." Please throw strained vocal '
chords, worn out fingers. sore lips in the waste can at the ~
bottom of the stairs. Don't leave them lying around for t
othe1·s to pick up. 1
- - - - To The Sublime
All kidding aside now. These things we hope in good
earnest thM vou will always have: a love of truth as a '
•·eflection of Truth: of beauty as an imal!'e of Beauty; a ~
remembrance of Nazareth as a home: a willingness to act '
and to speak and thus uphold your principles: a recognition ~
of Gorl as the center of you•· life: Mass as the heart of the t
day. May you catTy the light of Christ wherever you go. o
Now. before we begin to tease you and fete you so that ~
C•·aduation Day will be only smiles. we say om· more ;
serious - farewell! ~
"Fat·ewe' l. May l·lessings guide thee among men. May
Cod with love watch ove1· thee, and heed Thy goings and
be near thee at thy need."
Mondoy, Moy 7, 1951
Msgr. Middleton
Will Address
Graduates June 3
The Rt. R~'·· Mllfl'· John S.
lliddlelon, Ph.D., St>ttttury ror
F.ducntion in the Dioc~Sf' of New
York City, will ndd..,.ss th~ grad·
uating dass st th eir Baccalaure­a'"'"
Mass, Sunday. J un~ :1. Or.
Mjddleton, a native or New \' ork
City. h<ls been proreasor or phil­osophy
nt St. Joseph'• SeminRt·y,
n member or the Institute or
Philosophy or the Fordham L'ni·
,·enity Graduate School nnd di·
rector or the Conrrat.ernit)' or
Christian DoctrinP for the At·rh·
diocese or New York.
In addition to writing se,·eml
books, among them Christ and
the l' rio•t nnd J ,h•i n~e for Cod,
Dr. Middleton has been 11 wl'iter
fo t· HCommonwcul," "Jou•·nul of
the Heligion lnstituU!," "Catholic
Action/' and the ''1-"ol"dhnm UnJ ..
\'ersity Bulletin."
They're OH
At a Good Start
Even though it'a enrly in the
season thes<> girls were settled
tor next year when (:leaner went.
to press. Mary Bush has been
awarded a tw:hotnt11hip nt the
Georgetown School of Political
Science and Go,•emment, and
Norma Jean Cloos, an auistant·
ship in mnthemntica st Mnr­quette.
Katherine Col"\!& has 11 poaition
in the Department of Sl4tr,
Washington, D. C. Mary Ann
Doyle will be naai~~ctant supervisor
or pediatric• at Strong Memorial
Hospillll. Winift-ed Geigcl will
be leuching in Stonturce, Puerto
Rico. Bentice Gu~J"reit'O has u po­sition
teaching art nt Durnnd·
Eastmun School. Nant)' Hnasel·
wnndC.I' will be wo1·king in thC'
George Oieb·ich hlsut·unce Co.
Knthlcen Kucbcl will be mcdi·
cinl' clinical instt1.telot• ni Cl'·ouse­h~
·ing Hospital, Syl'Ucuse. 'M nt·y
I Monrtghnn hM n teaching posi·
lion in the thit·d grndc nt Out··
' nnd·Enstman School. Anna Mm·lc
• Ong wi ll continue he•· studiea at
the Catholic Univet·sity or A lllCI'•
icn. h-enc Parker has sccui'(Jd n
job as music teuchc•· ul the
Ridgewood School, Irondequoit.
Mary Augusta Aama and Enid
Winterhaltet· have been accepted
at Buffalo State Teacher'• Col·
lege for advance work in elemen·
tary school teaching. Florence
Feniechia hna accepted a pool­lion
as secretary for the Law­yen'
Cooperative Publishing Co.
Rena Welch will be tuching com·
mercia! aubjecta at Caledonia.
Patricia Bryant will enter lh•
WACS after completing her work
at St. Joaeph'a Hoapil41, Elmira.
She .,..;11 be a laboratory teehni·
clan. Ann Tiemey i1 kinderRar-
1 ten teacher-to·be nl Fairport Crn­tral
School. Lina Brownell hR'
ohatined an a.saislllnt.llhip in the
~traduatc sehool or Fordham Uni­•
ersity. Meanwhile Marianne
Hoffman will be tenching in the
P.''Hdes ut Frnnkfot't, New York.
JOY IS BOUGHT
WITH SACRIFICE
THE G LEANER
UNDERGRADUATE OFFICERS
N oUY':JOA.N rtnG!RAlO YUtGINIA.!J-ONt sl_JCSfPHIMDROSICA 8AJt8AIItA MOOIU
The fo llowing at-e all the elec­tion
a-esu1ts in when Gl f'a ner
went to p.-~s.s.
t lndergraduate .-\ssoc.iation:
P1-es., Vit·ginin Jones: V. Pr-es.,
J osephine Rosien; Sec .. Barbara
Moot·e: Ta·e us., Ma1·y Joan Fitz ..
gcmld; Re~. Pt·es., Joan Monaco.
Sodality:
Pt·er., Rosemary Walke•·: V.
PPer., Jm1et Duvis; Sec., a orothy
Mulcuhy: Tt·eas., Margaret Mat­tom.
~lisj4ion8:
l't·er., Martha Mot-an: V. Pre!.,
J cn11 Scheg: Sec., Mat·y Ellen Cui·
linnn: Tl'eaa., Barbara Major.
:S FCCS:
Jeanne Orexelius, ) largaret
McCruth.
NSA:
Mary Lou Abel, B:wbt\l'a Major.
Catholic Action:
Leader and N FCCS Regional
Chairman, Jean Major.
Senior Class:
Pres., Patrit!ia O'Brien; C. Rep ..
Jean Major; Treas., Margaret
Mat)' Berr)•: V. Pres., Carolyn
Lortsch~r: s~ .. Jacqueline Barnes;
MISSION TOTAL MOUNTS
Jn the course of its existence
the Fremin MiSBion Unit or Naz­llreth
College has collected and
dist1·ibutcd to missioners in vari­ou~
Aelds a total of $12,190.78.
Since the unit was organiz.ed in
H.i27, this amount covet's a period
or 23 years. Tt has steadily ill·
creased so that in the past four
yea rs the tot.' l amount distrilr
ut.ed wtts $6.981.37. In the year
1950 alone, from J anuary to Dc­cemoor,
the record sets the tota l
nt $1,615.00, the highest in the
un it's history.
The succeaa or the ~·remin M is·
sion Unit's undertakings is due
wholly to the efl'ort or the stud·
entaof Nauorelh College, each or
whom is a member.
GET YOUR AIRING
JEAN SCHEG, '52
Now that spring is here, the
underclaasme.n can be seen trying
to iron out their winter kink&
with baseball and tennis. Even
though the days of gym elasse•
are over, some of the upperclass·
me.n can be sten about the tennis
courts.
1r you happen to look out a
window and see what looks like
Willium Tell it's probably Alire
Jlu,.holt?.. 1\Ut archery expett.
Allee is in charjfc of archery thi•
senson and is doing an excellent
,loh in spite of two slightly un­dcratrung
bows.
Fn• tho._ who like to ~.,.t th•ir
exe t"Cise indoot·s. badminton all'l
• table tennis equinmcn t is alwave;
nt you•· dis posal in the gym­nnRium.
Pari., Bemadetw Sentner; Si giJ.
lum. Joan Reichtu'i: Vtrity, AU«
Bucholtz.
J unior Class:
Pres., Kay Cun·an: C. ltep ..
t.{ar)' Hanis; TJ't'-38., Leona M(!i&·
enzahl; V. Pt·es., Helen Ann Mr·
Carthy; Sec., M:u·y Seth Heve·
ran: Ptu·l., Maa·ilyn Mnlleri
Gleaner. Betty Hnyrs.
Sophomore Class:
Pres., Cnrolyn Paciolln: C.
Rep., J on.n Battle; Trcns., Helen
Cullinan; V. P1-es .. June Quigler:
Sec .• Ann Cawer: Pnt·l., M~du
Bowman.
Athletic Association:
Pres .. Jeanette Lortscher.
Pr~s Rureau:
Officer, Jennne Mnrie Good·
speed.
Sociology Club:
Pres., Annemarie Duminuro;
V. Pres., Phyllis Kunz.
Dante Club:
Pres., Rose Ann Ch.iuppone:
V. Pres., Emma Lungo: Treu.,
Annemarie Dumi11uco: Sec., Flor­enre
DelRosso.
Student Check-up
I have fulfilled all my obliga­tions
as a Christian lltudent this
year. Yes 0 No 0
I have done each day's work
well, seeing in it the means of my
sanctification. Yes 0 No 0
1 have worked to discovct·
truth. not simply to get ~rood
marks or to receive the favot· ()f
my teachers and J>a1·cnts.
Yes 0 No 0
1 have kept the proper order in
my life, beginJting each day with
Moss and making a daily men·
tal praye•·. Yes 0 No 0
r have taken part ln all achool
a t"tivities to train myself and to
give pleasure to others.
Yes 0 No 0
I have recognized the value or
student government, been active
in its work and obeyed it.s regula·
lions. Yes 0 No 0
I have given others the benefi t
of my ll'aining by making my
home, my neighborhood, m)' par·
ish, my friend• more ~on.sclous of
their proper relationship to God.
Yes 0 No 0
(Why not clip this out and
keep it as a reminder for next
year?)
Dr. Phelan To Speak
Nazarelh's graduates of '51 will hear the Very Reverend
Gerald B. Phelan. Ph.D .. U..D., eminent philosopher. deliver
the Commencement Address on their great day. June sixth.
Dr. Phelan has done outstanding work in the fields of educa­tion
and philosophy, and is at present head of the Depart·
men! of Philosophy at Notre Dame.
COLLABORATED WITii Gll.SON
Dr. Phelan collaborated with Etienne Gilson (one of
Ncnareth'a most famous visiting lecturers) and with the Ba­ailian
Fathers at St. Michael"s College of Toronto in the
founding of the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies of
which Nazareth's Sister Teresa Marie was one of the orig­inal
members. In the second year of his presidency of t.he
Institute. it received a Papal Charter and was given the
power to granl special degrees. In 1946 he organized and
became director of the Mediaeval Institule of Noire Dame.
A FUll. CATHOUC CAREER
Dr, Phelcm. who has had a varied life. was born in Hali­fax.
N. S .. in 189·2. He began his c<xreer doing parochial
work amonq the Acadians of Nova Scotia, and later worked
;"\ Benn"tl"'. J{., was acting chaplain to the Armv and Navv
Aurinq 1915-1916. After studv at the Catholic Unlversitv of
A"1erica and other colleges in the United States and C' .<m·
ada. he obtained his doctor's degree at the Catholic Unl­vorsily
of Louvain, where he was made an Agrege of Lou­vain
lor special research in psychology.
Amonq the books thai have brought honor uoon Cath·
olic scholarship are his Exnerience and Its Mortalities. St.
Thomas and Analoqv, and Jacques Marilain. Dr. PbP.l""
is also a constant contributor to both Catholic and secula t
periodicals in his varied fields.
Arrectis Auribus
A. M. a. '52
ln the Miaaion Room:
"lt was the morning of the day
that t chipped my ring-the
s«<nd atone."
ln the Smokina- Lounge:
"Then the Frrshman said to
the Soohomore, •vou mean you
cut!' ..
ln 219:
"A• 1 •nid befol"\!. Actiones et
ni'A&ionts sunt ~uooo"itorum­wlw
nre you looking blank !'•
ln ll8:
"Are thc r·e more possible com~
binationM of hnnd11 in a oinoch1P
or hrirt~P~ flc,..k-'ontolo~tieall v
" '"flRkin'f'?"
ln th• Studv Hall:
" I hove no hP,'OPS left since I
h~nt·d UuLt Teddv Roosev~lt
WAll 1uet All OVCfVI'OW1\ Bov
Srout 11nd that the Rouo:h Riel­era
mut t havP ulnnned on trav·
P1Jitur picrgv-bnck '<"nu~e thev
fnrsrol to brin(( horRes with
them."
In ?20:
110o you remember Shelley's
norm 'Adonais'- you do re­mtmber!"
In 126:
"Th• well inten11ted tleTSOn
l"4'membera hiK AOCinl responsi·
bilitie• "' well ao his Academic
nneA. There will be a S<>ciololt)'
Club medina- on . . . ."
Tn lhe Biolo~~rv Lab:
uoo vou suooose Sisler is sro­in
«" to do some re.111Parch work
In the Librarv! She ..,nt us
on Another fteld trip for fire·
tliea."
1" I he T\lnn•l :
••Jt'" the '\\'RAT!!"
ln 118:
"Then vou've nil htArd about
,..n.ntie e'll1"""'~'" ,.nft r,.ltte hAir th,.
Jod i•• uaed in lhe '20'•. It i• or
•••cnce not true hair. ond be­lonll'•
to •ome other bein~r.
fCnmP~UmPa humnn." (Wow ­notnlocrv
wH ~ eoMmetics t.ht'Own
in for f1·rc.)
In 329:
.,Plan now fo1· vour· rutu•·e.
Hnrp lesson• $1.50 nnd up."
Buffalo Alumnae
Offer Scholarship
The Buffalo Chnpter of the
Nazal"\!th College Alumnae Auo­dalion
,,;.u a·wanl a one year
partial scholarship or one hun­dred
dollan to " resident or the
Buffalo area who will enwr th~
freshman class or Nazal"\!lh Col­lea-
e in September, 1951. This io
a new project for the group and
a scholarship committee ha8 been
O"~nized to make necessary a•··
rangements. llfrs. James F. To·
bin, Mrs. J ohn J . Burke, and th•
Misses Elizabeth Gcor~re, Loretta
Kercher ond Christine Wilson
w-ill serve on the commitlet.
On Sunday, June 17. tho Bur­ralo
Chapter will welcome the
19ol o:ratlu"les of the eollellt!
from the Buffa lo area at a nn•·ty
at the home of Migg Helm Ham·
mond.
Nazerene Is
Elected To Re9ional
NFCCS Office
Jeanne Drexelius has been
•lected bv the NFCCS rettional
council to be Recordin~t Secretar)'
or the Lake Erie Rettion lor
next year. Jeanne bas been Jun·
ior Delegate and served on a spe­cial
committee to evaluate com·
missions.
John Schoeneck, LeMoyne Col·
lege. is new President of lht'
Region. Oth•r offic:ers are: Maf\'
Frances McHugh (D'You,oille).
1st Vice-President: Robert 'Me·
Veigh (Niagara). 2nd Vice-Pres·
ident: \Frances Sullivan (Mercy·
hurst). Treasul"\!r.
These officers we"Ml elected dur·
in.or the Region NFCCS Congres•
held on our campus. Faculty and
students alike are to be com·
mended on the excellent eo11duct
of this meeti11g. Tt is certain that
those who took part nosscss "
more compleet sense of the rol•
of the student, both on his
can1pus and in h is parisll,
}lave- Vou }Ieard?
DOROTHY JABLONSKI, '52
Tt's just that time of the year
when you t ither have that
"abroad" reeling and dream of
sightseeing in far off enchanted
lands, or have the longing to live
in the sun lx;oide the sea during
those long hot summer after­noons-
Whispering Spring is
mnking a subtle crescendo into
summer, and those wished .. for
vacation days are almost here.
So, if you're fa.shion·wiae, you'll
breeze into summer with the lat­est
styles.
Cotton's the thing for every­thing
beach-bound or around the
town; and for after five. gleam­ing
cotton satins are becoming
popular. Lace, the at'lstoerat of
nl: fabl'ic.s, will be &ccn evcry­'''
here. lt1S the new summer star
-cool, feminine, and flattering.
Pretty as any ftower are the new
misty tissue chambrays tlnd ging­hams,
and the many so ft. sum­mery
prints. Many cheers for
aheers! Chiffons, voilea. organ­dies-
a]] arc Rower fresh and
petal perfect.
The vogue in coats is full still
but ,.;thin bounds, or narrow<r
and straighter with coolie col-
Marry Away!
MARILYN SPAlL '52
We consider the following d11to
overwhelming- and cncout·aging!
Here's a list of the enl!'ag•d sen­iors.
Frankly. we consider Sod­ololt'Y
the h&J>piest choice of a
n1ajor in the 8ChooJ fOI' obviou•
reasons. Doo·cen 'Ruggieo·o. Th~'­mn
Pelusio, Terry Lombardo.
Rosemary &hoenherr, l\Jary Joan
Hart. Sally Stock, nnd Joan Mn­,
l<!wski n1·e tlw lucky ones fa-om
th~ ~~t>CiolottY deo~rtnwnt: MA•·v
Ann Gaentler and Jean Cistemino
from the art department: Elsie
Conzalez from ~he sprrch dcpart­m~
nt: nnd Eileen Mulcahy, n
nurse.
Wt< can't figure out what it i•.
but maybe tenn1ing how to han­dle
people ho8 somethin~r to dn
with it. Sociology, herr we come!
ll'Youville HeQds L·R-C
01Youville College has secured
the national chairmanship of the
11ew Labor Relations Commission
or NFCCS whirh has been set up
lno·~rely through the efforts of th•
Ruffalo campus. Bec:ause or stud­~
nt interest, special courses, and
its location in a ~trent lndu•trial
renter. D'Youville has ooen ar­ceoted
for this honor and res-pon­oibility.
~tsy Quill will be na­tional
chuirmnn.
'rhe nims or the eommJSSJon
nrc mnni!old, and embo11ce both
an effort to make students
aware of the great need for lead­ership
in the labor fleld, and nn
Pffort to stimulate study of the
aocio-economic aspects of the
Papal Encyclicals.
We eongrotulnte our sister col­lege
on heo· etl'oo·ts to spread
Cho-istian social teaching and
may Joseph the Worker help her
In this project.
The student council or Nazo­o
·~th Colle~re has voted to set up n
sub-comml•sion of NFCCS on
Labor Relations.
Iars; ther've spo1·t shoo·t sleeves
big puff s leeves, or no sleeves nt
all. The redingote is coming in;
the tunic coat is can·)ting on; and
shaggy fleeces ao·e still "''ery­whare.
The oval silhouette in suits is
the newest cut of all. The trend
in dresses is sheath8 in hiding
behind long, swerving scnrves or
showing for n few measured
Inches under liCted overakirts. As
foo evening dresse&-any length
goes except to the ball, then it
must oo long und full oo· long nnd
ahenthy.
Crispness is the common dt­norninator
in fabrics. And for
coolness the leading colors are
go·ay oo· black - with - white or
white-with-black-80 much of it
everything else looks bright and
waml by contrast!
\Vhethcr you're in uncrowded
outdoor spaces or paying your
respects to the Festival of Brit­ain,
or dropping in on Paris' t\\·o­thousandth
bir·thday ]>arty, or
just plain loafing at the bench. ir
you keep an eye on your ward·
rob(;, you 'II stay on the sunn)'
side of summer.
Bachelors-To-Be
MARGARET MARY BERRY, '52
Didja hoppen to know thnt
our stald old Se11lon ure now
entering a special class called
"bachelors". Let's go back a few
years and see exactly what is im·
plied by that term. We have to
rder to a word that ~ts its or­ill'in
from Medieval Latin bacea­laure:
atus, which, in turn comes
from bnccalaureus, 1ncaning n
bachelor of art. Notice the pres.
ense of 'laurus', the Latin word
for laurel or honor. Webster, the
friend of the average collegienne
has defined the word bncealaure­ate
as "the degree of bachelor
conferred by uni ... ersities and eo1·
leges", and the word bachelor ao,
"one who has the first or lowest
academic degree conferred on him
b)" a college or university."
In modern univenities. the sig·
nificance of the degree of bache­lor
In relation to higheo· degrees,
varies. At Oxford and Cam­bridge
(don't all enroll at once)
th~ bachelor ean proceed to hit
mastership by simply retaining
hi• name on the books and paying
certain fees. At other univerai·
ties further examinations are
necessary. However, in no case
is the bachelor a full memoor of n
univers ity. Now in the light of
this knowledge we can look with
new reverence upon the Senion,
who come June will have the
add~d perfection (in the natural
order. or course) of bachelorhood,
that is, until they get their Mra.
(M.R.S.).
TH E GLEANER
As You
Like It
JOAN REICHART, '52
Monday evening, May H will
seu Johann Strauss' sparkling op­C:
t'tl, "F1edcrmuus" pa-csented ut..
the Eastman Theat1-c by the en­tire
company of tht< Metropolitan
Opera headed by a east of ita
top artists.
This pao·ticula1· o I' e r" hu•
achieved the distinction of being
lhe hit production or the entire
Met season' and has lx;en loudly
acclaimed by New Yo•·k co·itics
for its brillinnt east nnd vivacious
presentation.
In the leading rok,. will lx; Pa­~
rice Munsel, Margue.·ite l?iazzu,
Eugene Conley, Chal'les Kullman,
Jurnilla Novotna and John Brown­lea.
Jack Gilford will pro\ide the
comic interest in the role or the
jailer while Suzanne AnH~R, Puul
F'o·,mke nnd Hugh 1'hompson
complete the cast_
Engli•h Takes a Bow
For tho fi1·~t time since the Met
has lx;en making ita nnnual up­J>
earancf'S at the Eastman. the
opern will oo sung in English.
The new English Jy.-ics are by
Howard Dietz, Broadway plny­"'
right who feels that the Eng­lish
language is eminently rich
and singable and so rewrote the
Jyo·ics accoo-di11gly.
Because of its gay, madcup
nnvor, hFiede1-mau.s" is ranked
not only as the operatic su«ess
of the yenr but. as u musical com·
cdy success in competition with
Broadway's foremost stage at­traction.
s.
Here's one ll'IOl"C b1·iel note from
the Eastmnn. Mr. Ha t'Tison and
the Civic Oo·chestra will present
on Sundav. ~lay 6. an ever­popular
All- Gershwin Concert
featuring Concerto in F with pi­ano
soloist Alfo'ed Molllcdous tmd
soprano ooloist Ma.-ilyn Miller.
See t'or Yourself- ..
Have you eve1· wondered why
mother raved 80 about 'Rudolph
Valentino or Sada Thompson!
\Vetl, you needn't wuit fo1· their
screen biog.-aphica where you
only get a reasonable facsimile
but now you can ace and judge
{or yourself the very pictures,
tho origlnnl• that thrilled mom
so. Just take a trek to the Dry­den
Th•••""· recently opened pla)'­house
ndjncent to the George
Eastmon house and p1·esented lo
the public as part or the George
Eastman photography museum.
Here ever)' week lectures on pho·
tographie topics tire fcutured, but
the main nttraction aeems to oo
th~ •bowing of the old time
ugreat.a" headlining the matinee
idols of the 20's. Now at lust
you'\•e have the chance to tom·
pare Rudolph with Burt.
Any .tudent desiring
e job as camp
counselor this summer
plea se see
Sr. Eva Marie
Dip Into Mary Books
PAT RUTISHAUSER, '51
Tru<-· Oevotion tt.l Mary-Soiut
Louis Marie Gignion de Montfort.
tlinls on gi\'ing oneself wholly
to Mary, and through her to J e­sus,
as her slave.
Queen of All Ueur1oa- publis hcd
bi-monthly by Montfort Fatheo·a,
Wlkhfield, Conn.
)lunitieenlissirnus O<•us. ency·
rlical by l'ope Pius X 11-Catholir
Mind. Jan., '51. DeRnitlon of the
dogma or the Assumption. Good
reading.
The Colholie World, No''· '50.
vol. Cl.oXX II, pp. 124- 132.
"1,he Crowning Jewel foa· u
Queen"-Jnmes McVann.
Series on Asst.unption or Our
Lady-1le' '· John A. Hnrdan, S.J.
11 Magnificat'' - beginning
Oct., '50 .
Glories of )Jary-Saint Alfon!IO
Maria de Liguori, Oo'OOklyn, Re­demptoo-
isl Fathers, 1931.
Mary's P~rt iu Our Redernr'·
tion - Ceo. Duncan Smith, New
York, Kenedy, 19:\S.
Monday, May 7, 1951
Today's Student
Thinks Say
NSA Leaders
Ann Tierney, Mar) Lou Abel
and Barbara Major attended the
Spring Conference or the New
York State Region of the N11·
tional Students Association held
the weekend of April 27, 28 and
29 in Buffalo New York. The
host college was the University
or Bufl'alo with Stanley "Bud"
Jung acting as general chairman.
The theme around which the
conference was built is "Todny's
Student Thinks''. The con!eo·ence
was broken down 1nto four eom·
mission sections in whie.h the In·
ternational, National, Regional
and l.ocal levels or NSA IH'o­grams
were discussed. Ln addi ­tion
to the commission sessiona
nnd pltonaries, there was a clau
in Parliamentary Procedure, an
'evaluation' of NSA, speeches by
p1·ominent figures from Buffalo
and the State and a banquet and
informal get-together Saturday
night, A]ll'il 28th.
Students from all the colleges
and universities in Upstate Nt"A'
York were cordially invited to
attend. nclegates ro·om non-mem­oor
NSA schools and from uni­versities
in Canada were especi·
ally invited to attend.
Conjl'ralulationo oo thP dl­reclor;;~,
east and choruses of
S.ll.Q. : Jt WJl!j li'U iy ~· 11lQ8l
enjoyable work of nrl.
rite King Jfeads tlte Jfouse
PATRICIA McWILLIAMS, '52
Who's the head of your hou•e1
Fathel', mothe1·, you unswe1·.
Wrong lend. Someone else is the
head of the house, or should oo.
Christ th~ King reigns there;
yt:ur hon'le is His kingdom. Pf'r·
haps HIs reign has been un­known
oa· unofficial up to now
Then, it'a your job to see thl\l
Christ get• official and social rer­ogn
·ition or His Iovin~ Kingship
in your own family. 'rhis is t~f"
precise purJ)Ose of the ceremony
nnd Jiving of the Enthronemrnt
of the Snco-ed Hetn·t.
Tho cco·cmony hnd its begin­ning
b11ck in 1907 when PooP
Pius X sold to Fr. )!ateo, who
had submitted for 11ppo'O\'tll his
pl'O!l'l'um for U•o rstnblishmcnt
of the kingship or Christ. "Not
only do I permit you but I com­mand
you to Jtive your lire rnr
this woo·k of Sodnl Sal"ntion."
l'lan Ma1>ve<l On!
Fr. Mateo's plan was to oo •c­complished
by, (I) plncin~t a pio­ture,
stntue 01' otheo· image or the
Sacred Heart in n plnce of honor
in the home. f2' l"()n•ecrati~flll' the
entire family to the Sacred Heart.
and (3) Jiving that con..,cration.
In n sim1>le, yet beautiful ce•·e­mony,
the oriest In the presenc~
or th~ fnmily and friends b'~· .. ~
th~ ima¢e ~nd enthrones it in a
olace of honor. The fnmilv then
•·eeite• the Ctedo nnd each mem­ber
freely consecrates himself to
the Sacred Heart or Jesus.
The ceremony, howcvel', dots
not in itself fulfill the purpose of
the enthronenwnt. The family
must Ji,·e the enthronement, tht
consecrRtion: that is, they mu'1
nwke Christ the King and Center'
of a ll thci•· heuo·u.. They must ·
bring their joy!. their sorrows,
theio· problt<ms and difficultiro to
Him. Their home must lx;come
anothco· Nnzno·eth, nn abode of '
justire and love. Family lift
henceforth must hun its lx;gin-(
ning and ending on the altar of I
the Saco'ed Heao·t. He muot btl
the nid In all the ramilv's undc,...l
takingo, the 1·efug~ in difficultiea:
the integrating faet<>r of 11\•t<J
in il. (
Let !'lim Ueign
Brinll( Christ to your home1. 1
Establiah thill kingship lheo't' ,.'
that vou and youo· family ma•1
~x P<'tience u PCI'IIOnnl renlizutio11 "~
or Christ's PI'OilliRe to St. Mnr.l
~rnret 1\lary, "I will bless .,.,,..<
ol;~ee where a picture of Mt"
Heart shall be set up and hon-~
Ol'ed."
We have it on good authoritl~
that the Sodality will ha\'e tht
establishment of the enth1'0ne ~
ment ns one of thei •· majot· proj·~
eels next year. Why not beal,f
them to it in your home? WriUJ
to The National Shrine of 1ht(
E"thr,.n•ment. 4930 South O•·r.
kola Ave. N.E. Wns hinJ.<Ion. 1).('..,.;
!or free inlormntion and en-0
thronement prayers. N
~ ~ Moncl~'/• Mly 7, 1951
StudCI!ts take
Kosnq; Pledge-
! 'l'he Rosary Pledge or Our
Lady, ~he main project of the
Sodality this year, will be made
by the student of the college on
May 14. In this pledge the stu­dents
pt·omise to say a rosary
eve1·y day for the test of their
' li"es. 1 t may seem at ti r·st to 00
a difficult task but then it must
be remembe•·ed that habi t "111
3 mnke it easy. Mor-eover there is
no sin attached to the breaking
of this pledge. What a wonde•·ful
Mother's Day gift to the Queen
or all Mothers.
Mar)• has asked for prayer and
sacl'i fice. The Rosary pledge will
help fulfill her request. By it we
honor he•· and hCJ• Son and ad­•
·:ulce the cause of world peace.
1
'52 Goes To Work
-
With books cast in druwets for
another sumnlel' or •·est and vaca·
tions, the Junio1-s find that they
•till c:m't take it easy and do
nothing for those summe1· months
nnd as usual must be busy all the
lime. "No rest foJ• the wicked"
it has been said but we m·e not
s making any accusations. Listed
,f below are some of the places
'':hcJ'f' the 52'ers may be found
e sometime after June 6:
)t AnnenHu·ie Duminuco, Buffalo
r and Crystal Beach: A I ice Uu­lt
r~Q'tz. Jou1·nalism wo•·k on the
3, Union and Echo newspnpet·; Shil·­o
te\' Mahle•·· Vacationing in New
e Yot·k City: Joan Fao;an, Kodak
,f "nd Honeove Lake; Nancy Yogg,
·e Kodak Park: Jo Rosien, New Yot·k
r.itv -and Lawvc1·~ Coooerative
~I r::oro.: Josie Frisicano, Lawye1'S
oe Cooperative Co1·p.: Gina Jones,
•.. Nn~'lY4)th Collcq-P SummP'' School ;
;,. .TI):an ~"hi'!P'. ,V,l'k at Hawkev~ :
'" Roo• '\nn Cltianuone, Middlebur)'
Coli•.,.. to "tudy F1·ench: ]\fade­line
MAdi .,.,.n, Middlebury College
ll) ~tudy Fl·ench; Joan Monaco,
•· Work at Sampson Air Uase:
1\MelMI'Y Walker. Counselor at
v JAu•·d~s Camo. Skaneatele•, N.
n Y.: Kav Beo:andy, Samnac Lake:
r- Pat C1x»don, Sealtest l ee Cream
'V Corn.: F''o•·ence Del RoM:o, ~amp ..
v •on Air 'Base-w01·k? : Kathy
1_ llm·ke. Lincoln Alliance Bank:
.Tanet Davis. Ledley's Jewelers;
v C'.nrolvn Van Dame, Telephone
•• Co.: Pat O'Brien, Head counselor
,_ nt Cnmu BI'Oadlea: Jean Major,
i- Cat·rier Corp. in Syracuse; Carol
•t Hnggerty, Organist; Josephine
:e Tutino. St. Joseph's in Elmira;
1
e Joanne Sehumaehel', 'Rome -
1\· Cohocton: Marion Smith, GcneJ"UI
'r,l~ctric Co1·p. in Svr'AC"us~: JOan
, .• MOOJ"f!. DramaticA CnunRelol' of
t- OuL' J.adv of Lourdes Camp in
New York.
Movinq-Up-Day
Opens Week
uwhcrc 0 where are the gra,-re
old Seniors?" and as the words
of the song continue usare now in
the wide, wide, world." As these
strains fill the uudito•·ium on
June 4 at the traditional Moving­Up-
Day ceremony, the Seniol'S
must at last realize that the days
of undergraduate study are over
and the time has come to go out
into the wol'ld and put the
pa·caching into pt·acticP. On this
day, gifts are p1-esented to the
•·csigning officers and they in
tun1 bequeath the insignia of
theil· respective offices to their
newly elected successo1·s. Tributes
are extended to our beloved Dean,
Sister Rose Angela, and to all of
the faculty n1embers. Every stu­dent
takes part in the moving of
the tassels into their new position
for the coming ye-,;"11· signifying
that anothe•· term has been com­pleted
successfully. The ce1-emony
closes with the singing of the
t raditional college songs, the
class songs, and in conclusion
the Nnzareth College Alma Ma­ter.
Moving-Up-Dar brings to a ll
the rMlization th<it Senior Week
has come nnd with it fill the
Commencement aeti,·itics.
Sophs Receive Honor
The Sophomol'c scc,·etar ial
majors won honors for them­selves
in n 1·eccnt Esterbrook·
Ga·eg~ sh01·thand writing test. In
a nation-wide competition the 22
membel's of the department 1-e ..
ceived Certificntes of Merit. 'l'~ct'<!
will be a furthc1· judJ:rin!! t'> Iff' ..
te•·mine outsl~u1ding a<'horl~ in
this fi~ld.
Out of Context
JO ROSICA, '52
Joan Reichart-uSister, T don't
think your cnse is completely
hooeless."
F'riend-uWhat are you '''1·iting
ynu•· tt"rm on per· on?"
Mal'ilyn Spall - "Typew1·iting
pno~ l·."
Maureen Skhrjn-tton-14'l'he Kids
,.:ant tn have a winter pat·ty, you
know, a paa·ty in winter!"
J e(u> Scheg - "Oo-oh, look
what's in the kitty!"
MAY DAY -
WED. MAY 9
Bring your
friends to
honor the Queen
T ~1E G L EANER
· The Room of Doom, May 23
ALICE M. BUCHOLTZ, '52
1'he morning bell dngs and it clangs and it clings
as you •·un back and forth on the floor,
J>i lling pens full with ink all the while ns you think
of the notes that you left by the door.
When you got to your seat your clean pa1>er looks neat
and you glance at the cJock on the wall,
Then the questions arrive-there are fifty plus five­and
the cl1oice isn't narrow at all.
0 you groan and you 1noan as you're chi lled to the bone,
Cor a cool breeze that's left from the night
Makes you•· papet's all fly, and you're .,;vondering why
you've a pen that engraves as it writes.
See the hands on the clock as it's saying tick tock
seem to wave and to waggle tres gay,
As your pen slips your hand and you see it's just g•·and
'cause it blotted your answtrs away.
And you reach to your face for that moment of g•·ace
when the Holy Ghost comes with a whirl.
llut how swell when you find that your neighbol' behind
Wl'ites like tnad- He's inspil'cd the '''t·ong girl!!
Then >•ou heal" a wild scream that might come in a dream
when a train plummets down in a show,
Rut it's •·eal ly a one who has finished! all done!!
and you've only five minutes! so speed ....
And you look once again and the thought me< youl' ken
that you've answered ten tnore than you 1 ~d.
Then vou're finished at last and you think that •u passrd,
why you mighl even manage a D!
Hut you reall1• resolved, when the stuff b'Cts involve-d,
you rnighl stot't lnrrnintl xo<utet'. you see!
TODAY Gives Us Help
Beeause there is a g~-eat deal
of talk about •·estoring nil things
to Ch l'ist, been use the1·e seem to
be many seriously interested in
this line of business, and because
there are obst•·uetions in the
work, we'd like to pass this bit
oi info along. We ha,•c disco•ered
n maga.~ine thnt ('(mj:OidP.rs the
problems or the trade and offers
answers along with suggestions
ror tools and methods.
TODAY, published b)• the
Chicago Inter-Student Catholic
Action Orgt~.nization, is a monthly
publication that gives up-to-dato
news on applying Chri.stian prin­ciples
in intel,tationa.l affairs, dat·
ing, the theate1·, abstract art,­cve•
·ything. It's a PI'Ofessional bit
of work, including outstanding
write1-s; it's rnodera.te; it's eon­Cl'ete.
Don't let anothel' week go
by without giving it a look.
TODAY, published monthly
from September to June; 638
Deming Place, Chicago 14, Ill.; $2.
Get your subscription in now lor
next year. Write for sample
copies.
PARMELEE SHOES
54 EAST AVE.
" 117 bere Fitti11g Sboes
1 s a Science"
TASTY PRODUCTS
Potato Chips
All•n's Frtneh Fried Corn
Blue Boy Cheese Corn
Jep's Raw Corn
T • rnt•• Box Pr•tul
Blue Boy Cheet Twist
Bi9 Four Yurn Yum
ROCHESTER MAID
POTATO CHIP CO.
10 South Woshinqton St.
Rochester, N. Y. LOeust 9780
Nurses Finish Up
(t's tim~ we stoppM :mel took
a look m·ound the state to locnte
ou1· Nazareth nurses. The seniors
~ue waiting ro1· graduation Jikc
the •·est or the Class of '51 but
thei t' work iSn1t ended then.
They'll continue in tl·a.ining for
varying lengths of time :md then
take thei•· Stole Bom·d exams in
Octo be•··
The Juniors after June 17th
will be in Rochester at the Visit­ing
Nurse Association. 1'he only
exceptions to this will be Anne
Gormle)• and Mary Theresa Mark
who will be at Willard State
Hospital.
All the Sophomores will remain
at St. Joseph's Hospital, Elmira,
1mtil September when they'll be­gin
tbeir other affiliations.
For YOUR Convenience
RoUqlou'l Artidos. G:eating Carel$
B::)ckl. Gifts. Chureh Goods
Donald J. Brennan
808 BROWN STREET
Toopbono
GENESEE 3118
Across Main ~lreet
from St. Mary's
BASTIAN BROS. CO.
Olliciol
RING MANUFACTURERS
GE:ORGE D. KILLIP
District Mancqor
Glenwood 3380
1800 CLINTON AVE. N.
1 9 51
SR. MARY GRATIA
The sky is gre)•. Grey-white,
And tense.
1 t clings closely,
Bl'ooding,
With a hushed suspenseful expec-tation
Of- what., we do nol know.
We who at·e young
(Yet old, aged in the casks
Of wru's accele111tion)
With all the opening doors
Of life's bnmd vistas beckoning,
1\f ust yet look buck
And see our fathers' W01'kS, nnd
all that wenl before,
Swelling behind us on {I thunder·
ous t·oor
Of wt·ecked ideas, LOl11 philoso-phies;
A universaJ groping in the dnrk
Away from light .
Our hands must grasj) lhe shud-dering
wheel
Loosed by olde•· fingers
And bring an undirected rocket
Back to contl·ol.
'l'he next few yeat·s al'e ours.
We leave om· books
f'lunging into the chilled r ivct·s
of •·eality.
What we shnll do n.ITects not just
ourselves,
Our loved ones,
But the world.
Tbe other nations lift their eyes
As f1·om a vast und flooded plain
To whe·re we stand on highe1·
ground,
Yet tenified that this sa me flood
Surging inexorable
Will sweep away our one remain­ing
hope-
This nntion.
Our decisions, <~nd the minds thnt
shape them
Will decide om· verr life-o1·
dent h.
Tt is to US,
But newly .. l'isen from our book~
It is to us the torch is passed,
That selfsame torch whose flo mP
so often seu•-ed
Men1s hearts . ..
How will we catTY it'?
To spread mor-e names or toa··
tm·ed devastation
0 God!
-Or light?
HAMILTON 8587
ANTHONY-KLEE
CORPORATION
Distinctive Printing
165 ST. PAUL ST.
ROCHESTER 4. N. Y.
McConnell's
*
The Home of
Quality Ice Cream
LIGHT LUNCHES
60 No. Main St.
Pittsford, N.Y.
6
WHO neeD IT~
Sl! SAYS SAltA CASSIDY
Sure'n the)•''·~ got rings on
their finge"' flO our ''eT)' belL
'vishes righl olf the top or the
henp to El i~e Gonzales and l'fe.
Jack Sll;fc, and to Eileen )lui·
enhy and Jock Collins.
Maimie Reitano was n good
actress ns M•·· Grube in the Sen·
ior.. . Fa.culty t~kit, complete even to
hammer nnd nails, and Anna
)[asten hod a dual role as Sister
Irene and Sister Josephine
Louise.
Bca Cl01·k "'"" the weekend
guest of Euid Winterhulte•· at
Le Puy and al110 took in the So·
dality Dance.
We hear thai Joanne Webb io
keeping drnmatif'l class ~~ctivt
lhese dayo wtih her interpl'Cla·
lion of 111rR. Gosc.
\Vinnie Cch:el ,·cceived the
good news thnt he•· mother will
come up from Puerto Rico for
graduation in June. Two nunB
who taught Winnie in high school
are also c-ominl(.
Graduation pa-t~nls are com·
ing early this year. Florence
Fenpic:hia hn.- n new ?.1erc.ut·y nnd
] ('rotH\ i\leyeri n-" n new Plymouth.
Mary Manfl h~\S been cuWJing
disturbo.nceo in Church Ristor)'
class. We ous]>«'t it's because
she's ticklioh.
Shhley Moorhead w·as lhl' l't'·
cent guoot of Jeanne Plunkett
who by lhe wnyJ with t\'laritLIHit'
HolTman will bo Shil'le)''S b•·ido•·
mnids this summer.
Connie Costieh donned the
apron of hosteas ....,_ntly and en·
tertnined Norma Jean Cloos and
Elsie Gonule• nl •upper nt h~•·
home.
Returned fi'OIIl Florida u nd
s porting beautiful tnlls (gl'l')
Carol Hetzler and )larianne 1-lofl'·
man.
Kathleen Schueltr dro,·e tn
Brighton recenUy to pick up 3
box to all ostensible purposes
quite hono•·abll'. But it sounded
lnOI'e like bingo equipment. Oh
Kay!
.. rhe same nnmc, the same
amite, the same dnncing feet! \Ve
wtre reminded of the "Rockettes"
,,•hen we saw Joan Taylerc nnd
Joan ViJ(neri in S.R.O.
Sheila O'Grad)• oimply couldn't
miss nn opening bnseball game!
1t. just would_n't. luwc been open­ing
game withoul her.
Do we e\'er love Joanne Schu­macher's
tan! \Vi8h we rould a.U
go to Florida.
There are three very quiet jun·
iot•s who must nlwtlys be work·
ing out difficult. problems. z-\nn
Smy l cs~ Ann ll.eidml.\n nnd He·
lene Donnelly a 1·e tht·ee marty•·s
of the math depnt·iment.
If anyone wanlo Rill' help with
l>niology, be sure to see Berna·
deile Senlntr. She never refuses
to do anl•thing.
We unde,.,.tnnd Jeanne Mnrie
(~oodspeed and her fl'iend had a
good time in Cohorton a couple
or weeks ago.
Why is it that it is so hard lo
find )farilyn Spall. Jo f'risicano.
Flor<>n<e Del Uo•so and )lary
ll elen Brown! It seems that
every time you a.ee nn)' one or
them, she's oil' with n Shakes·
pea re or Victorian t>octry book
under her ~u-m.
Did you notice three smiling
faces at the glee club concert!
The)· were none other than Carol
Ra~~terty, Joan Hentges and
ll elen KorO'.
The Reid of soriology " ·ill l'eal·
I>' be improved when Jo Ros ica,
Shirley Mahler. Gina J ones, Jonn
Fagan. Annemarie OuminU(O and
llinda Doerr are given the chance
to actualize their potentialities.
Janet Davis and Phyllis Kun•
ce1'tainly at'C the good little man·
1\I;CI'S, 'fhei1• WOI'k on tickets fOI'
s.n.o., and May Dny nctivitie• is
highly commendable. They at·e n
perfect team in nnd out or school.
The secretaries very seldom re·
ceive the t:redit due them. When·
e\~er you want. .nny typing done.
you never get. no (or an answer.
Among out' able helpe•·s r,.om the
(}nss of '52 na·e Maria Lh•adas.
Mary l .ou Kenney. :\lary Kemof.
Je>an Jud ge. and Jacqueline
Barnes, our Be(ret.ary starlets.
THE GLEANER
SJ)C'nking o{ the U.S.O., Jeanne
Surdet has met a fellow just her
site.
Ho~emn1'Y Palmieri Jlluyccl host­ess
to llo•e Bozzette anti t,ucille
OeGori._ over the weekend, while
\lary Moran entertaintd Denise
Frey. lneid<>ntally, :'\ini is bear­ing
up well under the otrain of
bet"oming an nu1\t.
Jeuuellc Kuhn hus many rot·
lowers in S.R.O. • • well "" out­side.
Ann Stenglein oe•·ntched hN·
brother's car the othet· du)'. She
missed marring Nnture'a beauti·
ful tre•s. but hit the house.
Hose Ann J>atnella hnd been
worried about getting IH·ides­mnid's
dresses, but don't worry
they were only !or S.R.O.
lntert~tintr lnterro~atious:
Did you know thnt Eunic.,
IJradley is tea<"hing muAic les­sons?
Why did Sonia A n ~eli get so
excit~d at suppe•· Sunday night?
Did the kitchens of Cornell's
model hotel pass the inspection
or Ginger Eaton's kef:n e)'t' when
abe "i•ited there n·renlly 1
Will Rita Valt'rio lenrn how to
piny tennis this summe1·! It <1
11
depends on Uncle Sam!
How will G1odu IAJ)f't. get. to
Cnliforniu this summer? She
tn)'l in dungarees!
Whnt is happening to Chuck
now that )lory Lou Pike is writ·
ing to someone in the Navy 1
What. has bccorrw of Jo l,nc.e's
little pig? We heau<l it f<•ll upt\rt
in biology lab.
Why didn't Jean Smith like Mt·.
C1;,ighton's empty enl in physics
lab!
What happens when on~ fellow
romes up fl-orn Conwll nnd lhe
other nics UJ) ft•om LeMoyM on
t lw R:une night? .Joltn l<'itzgcJ··
nld knows aU nboul il!
Will llary Lou Mandiu be in
th~ Eru~imnn Ballet Theall·• M"y
18 nr 19! She'" not ctuilf- Rure.
Did \' eronica Cas•Y'• bnby bot·
tle• have Iobel• on them!
J)id you know that. i\ nn G r3t'"
hn" cxt<>ndcd hc1· lnl(\Rt int.ercRt<t
to include Brockport'!
And one final word of congml·
ulntion lo Joan Kelley for n i<'r·
rific skit fnr that Senior-Faculty
puty.
':i2! SAYS JOA:-1 )IONACO
Congrntulntionsto Carolyn Von
Dame and Mory Shults £01' theh·
magnificent job as co-chairmen
of the junior prom!
A big job was done by a very
capable young lady. )lar~tar<t
)lattern certainly deserves much
c1·edit fot· handling the business
end of S.R.O.
For Delicious
Sandwiches and Sodas
Stopallhe
Powette Soda Bar
Located al the
POWER'S HOTEL
It muot be her patriotic duty,
or could there bl' some other rea·
•on fo1· nil the air-mail letters
Alice Bucholtz recei\'eS.
1\nlhy llu•·kc hud a man·&itc
task £o1· the juniot· prom, but het·
blind-date bureau pt'Ovcd very
successful. Many lh3.0ks. Kathy!
Dot J ablonski and Ginny Oar·
beau desel'\·e much credit for
their unlhing ell'orts in behalf of
the Red Cross this year.
If nnyon~ , .. •ants information
about the Arena theater, and how
many buses you lake to get there,
just ask Jane Yvonne Koenen.
Pat McWilliams. and Kathy
O'Hara~
Out· own Pauline Minh is cer·
tainly in g•·cnt demand. She hns
been invited to give a talk before
the girl scouts in Cannadaigun,
May 5.
SECO~D n ;AU DUSTY
P.\ UTICLF..S FtnST RA).'D
-FRO)I THE
VACUUM CLEA).'"EU
Obvious Observnti011:
Congratulation• to Julia Ga~~:lio
on the Soph i•sue or the Gleaner.
A 1110, we wioh to congratulate
) lartre ~!cGrath on being cho!'('n
as Junior Delegnie to NFCCS.
Dave drove Jean Ruhn back
Sunday, ns usunl, however, they
we1·e late due to b1·okcn wind·
shield wiperl!.
Ginny Teddy and Pat Thoma.
nre sporting air corps bracelets
or late.
Carol Ctt''f'nAtr is waiting !or
he1· appointment J\.8 senior host­ess
at the U .$.0. Between this
nnd \\rdting to rcl lows in (our
different se•·vieea, she ought tn
be kept pretty busy.
Haubner and
Stallknecht
FUNERAL HOME
828 JAY STREET
GEnesee 0300
TRANT'S Inc.
Catholic Supply Store
Religious Arllcles for
Church and Home
96 Clinton N. 115 Fronkl:n St.
Phone BAker 5623
~'! SAYS JOA.'( STEI)'.
Congn•tuln\ions to Pal O'Dea
on her engagmeent to Lou Flynt
and 1l lury Aun Biel to Don Woob·
ster, o.nd Uz Martin t.o Don Bire·
cree.
Whnt luck! Ann Scheible was
the l't'cipicnt or the third rnlfle
prize of $2oO. and Callisto t:Ottr·
~tuard's st.~te scholarship rame
through.
Joun l<inlilky and Eleanor \Vn1·
kowhtk we1-e seen at U.R. Junlo•·
Prom. Barb ) loore is planning
on attending St. BonM·entur<'•
Junior Prom. Yirginia )tulten
cont1nues to enjoy Co1,ell Week·
ends.
Mu1·y Cnt hc.-ine Riley hnd n
t.wo W<'Ck visitor r.-om NOlN"
Dame over Easte.r vucution.
Speaking of Notre Dame, Gract
Ziel hn.s nn nvid "intere•l" in this
institution.
Aft.er Easler, Florida t.ans
were displayed by llar~~:i<• Schut•
and r•n1 Millican. Recently Jnnt•
Qui~lcy flew io Ne"' Yol'k to at­tend
her brot~er's wedding;, ~eem~
us if Jnne •• the only omgle
Quigley left.
) lory Ellen O'Fiynn waa at the
Sodalit)' dttnce with J immy Ging
!rom U.H., while Pe~rKY Schnorr
was wit.h Ccorge ~·fc.Nunuu·u ft·om
St. Bonuvcnturc.
School doesn't have to be all
work. t\ok )lartha MeCarth)',
who is Father Shannon's tnvo1•ite
"heckler" in Religion claso. Or
hnvc you heat'CI :\ancy Wagner in
U8 U<'(1Uil'ing r·enown os u speech
nmkea· wUh an unusual repc1··
toiro. O•· bette•· still, d1'0p in 2:\G
and h<'m· Cnrolyna Capohq)O do·
ing one or her (amoul fi'l·tnth
l1'11nolationa. )lary llita Tasck·
ttta hnd un infamous date on her
term paper about LaSallt'-Un·
fortunntely 1864 wa• not 168~.
OFFICE SUPPUES
and
EQUIPMENT
JOHN R. BOURNE
131-33 Stale St.
Rochester. N.Y.
GEORGE BOUCHER
FLORIST, Inc.
BAker 1420
422 MAIN ST. E.
Oppo•it• EASTMAN THEATRE
TOWN TALK
BAKERY. Inc.
601 PULLMAN AVE.
EVERY DAY, WEGO
YOUR WAY
Phoao GLenwood 6772
Monday, May 7, 1951
In the bureau of unusual in·
formation, the editor discove•·ed
that Barbnrn !lowers bas \hr
unique probl•m of being th< only
studenl boall'de•· with her own cur
on cnmpus.
More unusunl news corncs from
J udith Houehins who 1-eports thnt
she once ordt'red an i<* c~ttm
soda in a night club. Sue Plunk·
ell's Iriends ( 1) pass the word
along that they tried to back Sue­a$
a c01nd I date for May pole~
dancer.
\Vhen it comeR to home towns, ~
)rimi Goodlet cnn give long talk• ,
on the subject- there's no plact '
like Boston. ·
Veronica Ou\ton goes home to
Hunt, N.Y. every weekend, while
Jane Frauk, Barbara llasselbaurr t
and Marianne Bartels look Io•·· 1
ward to weekends home in Bul
falo. Dolores Kokol may live ir:
Romulus, but she has her e)'H c
on SyTacuse. Nothin like tht 1
rovin' kind! . t
Cln'CI playing is n f;wo•·•lt
postime with f\nn l lanna but sht
keeps talking about Mel insteud'
of meld. Cloria Ciofrida has no
complaint with N. C. inforntnl l
dances, where she met Ftnnk.
Some mail tall ''fiends" an I
J oyce Dembski who receh·es ftu
mail from Potsdnm, Colgate, etc i
and Mary Schults from the Ail
Force. J cllllCIIe Scrcn gets he•1
mail !t·om n boy cnllcd J uck, Si•
ter Mary l:lasil's brother.
Some Freshmen hav• diJitin-1
guished themseh·es in ''arioUJ i
wa}~ l..ouil~ Connorton bas •·
e<~llection or pl'ett~· eanings whil•
Ann Holoh•n is one of the be111
dressed FI'Cshmcn. Ann Go"•er b
noted fo•· he•· last minute bu
stop o.nlvnls. ) lary Elle•' f rtf
mCS!'er is the most bnppy·go
lucky Freshman.
Hetzler Foundries
Inc.
Founders o!
Aluminum. Brass. Bronze.
Gray Iron Ccstinqa
ROCHESTER. N.Y.
Compliment I
oj
froJa n.rk'l
Prescription
Specialists
The
Central
Pharmacy
9 SOUTH MAIN ST.
PITTSFORD. N. Y.
Phone
Pillsford 260

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Transcript

J
t Vol. XXVI
•
Your Agenda
MAY 9-
May Ooy
Sider-Cia.u Benqueh
MAY IG-Nwru~ Ceppin9
MAY 11~11-Senior Art Ea;hibH
JUNE 2-Senlor Day of Rec:otlectlon (9 a.m.)
JUNE l-
8.uulau.r .. te (9:30 a.m.)
Resident Studenk' Dinner (6 p.m.)
JUNE 4-
Junior-Senior BruUut ( I I :lO•.rn.)
Movin9-Up Dey Exercises P p.m.)
Faculty-Senior Dinner ( 6 p.m.)
JUNES-Neshman-
Stnior luncheon ( 12 :30 p.m.)
Clan Dey bercises {l p.m.)
JUNE 6--
Perent-Senior luncheo" ( 12 p.m.)
Commencement (4 p.m.)
Senior Ball
Student Officers Share Info
•
Next year'> offic~rs wtll be w~IJ oriented aft~r th~ splendid
officers training program that has ~n planned for the year.
As is ue ( nculty memhers to d iscuss problems and make plans
for the following year. The meeting is scheduled for May 8
at 7 o'clock. All faculty members and the old and new officers
of undor~tprorriarion system.
It is a tribute to the judgment and understanding o f facu lty
and students a I ike that such 3 meeting as this can be held on our
umpu>. It ts concrete proof of the worhhility of cooperative
uudcnt government.
•
M~ PIUUHOie 'k/Mki Ro4a!Uf
The Fremin Mission Unit of Nazareth Col­lege.
as its final project for the year 1950-1951,
is distl'ibut ing one of .Msgr. Fulton J. Sheen's
World Mission Rosaries to each s tudent and
faculty member, both religious and full-time lay
members of the college.
In carrying out this project. the Fremin
Uission Unit is endeavoring to s t imulate in its
members t he prayerful zeal so essential to
Mission woc·k everywhere.
The World Miss ion Rosary recently intro­duced
by Msgr. Sheen in his radio broadcasts,
is designed to inspire prayer for the mission
fields of the five continents. Each decade is of
a di fferent color. The green decade is to be
offered foe· the missions of Africa, s ince green
symbolizes the color of its fores ts and the sa­cred
colo•- of the Moslems for whose conversion
we pray. Red is Ame•-ica's, symbolizing the
Red men who first fou nded the continent.
White is for Europe whose s piJ·itual capital is
Rome and whos.! white Shepherd is the Holy
Father. Blue 111arks Australia and all the
ntber islruuls of the blue Pacific. YeUow sym­bolizes
the morning li~tht of the East which
was the cradle of wol'ld civilization. The in -
troductory beads are in white because these
m11yers are offered for the Holy Father_
Thus in the five decades. the petitioner cov­ets
two worlds : the spidtual world of either
the Joyful, Sorrowful. or Glorious Myste ries of
Our Lord, and the !>hysical world of the five
r~'ltinen ts.
Monday, May 7, 1951
•
• Nurses Get Their Caps
Next Thursda,• at 7. p. m. the
freshman nurses will each place the
Cind ie that represents her life he·
fore the shrine of Mary, rake thP
nurse's pledge and be garbed in the
r ... rl itional nurse's cap.
MAY-JUNE
BULLETIN BOARD
•
MAY DAY HONORS QUEEN
The annual Ma)' Da)· in honot· of the Qufi'n or Heaven
and Queen of Nazareth will be celebrated on the coUege
campu$ on Wednesday,' May 9.
The day will lx!gin at 9 o'clock with Mass cclcbt·ated by
Bishop Ketu·ncy. The studcn~ body will lhcn JIUt·ticipate in
a procession to \'i&it the li"ing shrine~ set up nt vut'ious
points on the gt·ounds. The theme of the sht·incs, chosen in
aeurse's cap may be laid ro fashion.
Florence Nightingale, the mother
of modern secular nursing. orobabl"
wore a CIP because no well·dressed
~'n~~;lish lady of the Victorian oeri.--'
(Pit properly groomed without •n
~legant head decoration. Today th~
cap distinguishes th~ nurse as snrh
and iden tities her as n graduate of
• particu lar school. •
• • Senior Art Maiors Show Work
The Annual Senior Art Exhibit will displav
the nchie,·ements of the senior art maiors for
three days beginning Frida\' - Mav 11 . Students
"'~ welcome to altend the exhibit during th•
rluv. TI1c senior clussmates of the artists wi ll
hr viven a ~pecial reception from 2 to 5 I>· m ..
. nl'flAv. May 13. in the Art De1>artment.
\l~mber.s of the Art Departntent Class of '51
H~· l••tt Ci•ternino. Rochester; Mar~~:aret Cola·
4'·inn \cw~trk: ~larv Ann Caeuzlcr. Rocl1r-.::rpr•
Be•uicc r.uerreiro. Honolulu : Mul'innne Hoff·
" 'a• tcr. Hochestcr: Mary Ther•sa O'Connoll.
Trumnushurl!: Helen Stenl!el. Albany.
AHH HANNA MoUY AUGUSTA A$NA ''-OitlHCE DEL ROSSO
•
Sr. Margaret Mary
To Represent College
Sr. Margaret Mary will repre­sent
the collegiate nursing school
at a meeting of the Hospital Asso­ciation
of New York State to be
held at Atlantic City, May 25.
The theme of the meeting i• "The
Future of Nursing."
The main portion of the confer·
ence will consist of • panel dis·
cussion at which Sr. Ma rgaret
Mary will speak.
2
- ! visit). reminders for each day (Mass,
ment..\1 Jlrayet·, en·ands and such added as they come up)­can
keep the summe1· from slipping by and leaving nothing
in its wake but a few sun blisters.
Few exams and happy summer to you all!
THE GLEANER
NAZARETH COLLEGE
Publication Office: ANTIIONY KLEE CORI'ORATION
165 ST. !'AUt .• STREET
Vol. XXVI Monday, May 7, 1951 No. 7
l'ublished Monthly
l)y the Students of Nazareth College
Rochester, New York
l·:ditor-in-Chier JANE YVONNE KOENEN
Associate EditorR' ROS~:MARY WALJti;H, MARY H. BROWN
lluoincss Mnnugc1· ANNE lllEDl\!AN
STAF'F-M:ll'il)'~l Rcitc•·, .Alice Bucholtz, l'al•·icia c• .. ,edon, J eanne
Orexehus, Jeon Schcg. Corol Baggerly.
THe GLEANER
Poland Shows
The Way
Tod"y i• the reast or St.
Stnnlslaus, 1>at1·on saint. or Po·
htnd. This eJe>vcnlh century mar­tyr
was killed for l'CJ)ronehing
King Boleslas II for his diosolutc
life. 1L seem• th:ot todny Polnnd
is n •·eproach to the whole wol'ld
ro•· its abandonment or Chl'istian
rthics, and it is being morty•·cd
by Communist. dominnlion.
Jloland is the rnfH1:)fJ' country
or Eu•-ope, pnyin!f with i~ blood
ror the atheism, immorality, mn·
l~J·inliom that hilA flooded the
continent. Wo• Catholics mutt pay
with self-imposed sacrifices for
the sins of the wo1·ld. This is
the plan or God mnde manifut
to us by the modtm npparitiona
or th~ Blessed Virgin.
The month or May should be
a special rt'mindor I<> us or this
obligation or sneriflee. We must
otrer ench day :md every minuw
of the day for the glory or God:
we- must deny oursplves pleR.BUt'el
and do His will. For us student&
this means pnying attention in
class, e,·en nt three-thirty, study­ing
when we'd 1·nther sit in the
Mission Room nnd talk, being
cheer(ul and uncomplninins,r dur­ing
exams, loughin~t nnd pluying
wholehearwdly. We mu•t be to·
dlll''S joyful martyrs:.
Monday, May 7, 1951
Senior Profile z.n Review ...
Every class has a personality of its ow11. Its reaction
to problems, its participation in activities, its methods of
working nnd getting wo1·k done-these are unique with
each group that )>nsses along Nazareth's halls. One of the
faculty has said that a college collects knowledge because
the freshmen bl'ing a little in and no one ever takes any out.
The senioi'S this year seem to be an exception to the rule.
\Ve who have known you ha,·e seen you grow during your
college years and seen you accumulate a wisdom that dis·
plays itself in whatever you do. You have had many diffi·
culties to face. Calmly you ha\'e looked at each one, and
walked on with little disturbance. We'd almost accuse you
of being the "grave, old seniot-s" but it is an established
facl that you're the most light-heartedly gay people in the
college.
Vive Saint Jude!
It's morP than just a standing joke that the Class of
'51 can pt·ay anything into being. You've taken your class
patron and really made him work for you and you've worked
for him. There's not a girl in the school who hasn't been
made conscious of St. Jude.
All this bes(>eaks a right ordering of th ings, the precious
touch that seniors add to college life. This year's group '
has not only taken things in theit· pro)>er place, but they
have ~rone about their work swiftly and quietly. The almost
paradox of pep and calm assurance is the special mark of
'51. As individuals may you keep first things fit·st all your
life and may you work with the joy and strength of Chl'ist '
that you have acquired at Nazareth.
From the Ridiculous -
Now that your job-hunting has begun in earnest we of :
the under·classes look a bit wistfully in your direction. We
wonder what we'll be doing a year or so from now. We take
a second, deeper glance at our present life to see if we're
using il to the fullest. We suspect that there are worlds of
thought and activity of which we have not the slightest ink· '
ling yet.
But there's another reason for ou1· thoughtfulness. You
see, you'll be missed at Nazareth. It won't be the voluble
kind of missing that says, "Oh, 1 wish so-and-so were here."
It'll simply be the feeling that things aren't quite as they '
were. Every once in a while we'll look for one of you in the
hall to talk things over with, and then laugh at out· fo•·get­fulness.
Now we'd like to reverse the order of things and will you
sorne items to catTy oft' to your new life. As a favot· we
ask that you take a bundle of exams with you. Give them
to your classes-anything, just so long as we have fewer
a•·ound here! We suggest that the boarders take a handful i
of ladybugs to decrease the population, and that the biology J
majors gather u(> any stray fruit flies. Will the English 1
majors please remember something- anything- just so
long as "you remember." Please throw strained vocal '
chords, worn out fingers. sore lips in the waste can at the ~
bottom of the stairs. Don't leave them lying around for t
othe1·s to pick up. 1
- - - - To The Sublime
All kidding aside now. These things we hope in good
earnest thM vou will always have: a love of truth as a '
•·eflection of Truth: of beauty as an imal!'e of Beauty; a ~
remembrance of Nazareth as a home: a willingness to act '
and to speak and thus uphold your principles: a recognition ~
of Gorl as the center of you•· life: Mass as the heart of the t
day. May you catTy the light of Christ wherever you go. o
Now. before we begin to tease you and fete you so that ~
C•·aduation Day will be only smiles. we say om· more ;
serious - farewell! ~
"Fat·ewe' l. May l·lessings guide thee among men. May
Cod with love watch ove1· thee, and heed Thy goings and
be near thee at thy need."
Mondoy, Moy 7, 1951
Msgr. Middleton
Will Address
Graduates June 3
The Rt. R~'·· Mllfl'· John S.
lliddlelon, Ph.D., St>ttttury ror
F.ducntion in the Dioc~Sf' of New
York City, will ndd..,.ss th~ grad·
uating dass st th eir Baccalaure­a'"'"
Mass, Sunday. J un~ :1. Or.
Mjddleton, a native or New \' ork
City. h girls were settled
tor next year when (:leaner went.
to press. Mary Bush has been
awarded a tw:hotnt11hip nt the
Georgetown School of Political
Science and Go,•emment, and
Norma Jean Cloos, an auistant·
ship in mnthemntica st Mnr­quette.
Katherine Col"\!& has 11 poaition
in the Department of Sl4tr,
Washington, D. C. Mary Ann
Doyle will be naai~~ctant supervisor
or pediatric• at Strong Memorial
Hospillll. Winift-ed Geigcl will
be leuching in Stonturce, Puerto
Rico. Bentice Gu~J"reit'O has u po­sition
teaching art nt Durnnd·
Eastmun School. Nant)' Hnasel·
wnndC.I' will be wo1·king in thC'
George Oieb·ich hlsut·unce Co.
Knthlcen Kucbcl will be mcdi·
cinl' clinical instt1.telot• ni Cl'·ouse­h~
·ing Hospital, Syl'Ucuse. 'M nt·y
I Monrtghnn hM n teaching posi·
lion in the thit·d grndc nt Out··
' nnd·Enstman School. Anna Mm·lc
• Ong wi ll continue he•· studiea at
the Catholic Univet·sity or A lllCI'•
icn. h-enc Parker has sccui'(Jd n
job as music teuchc•· ul the
Ridgewood School, Irondequoit.
Mary Augusta Aama and Enid
Winterhaltet· have been accepted
at Buffalo State Teacher'• Col·
lege for advance work in elemen·
tary school teaching. Florence
Feniechia hna accepted a pool­lion
as secretary for the Law­yen'
Cooperative Publishing Co.
Rena Welch will be tuching com·
mercia! aubjecta at Caledonia.
Patricia Bryant will enter lh•
WACS after completing her work
at St. Joaeph'a Hoapil41, Elmira.
She .,..;11 be a laboratory teehni·
clan. Ann Tiemey i1 kinderRar-
1 ten teacher-to·be nl Fairport Crn­tral
School. Lina Brownell hR'
ohatined an a.saislllnt.llhip in the
~traduatc sehool or Fordham Uni­•
ersity. Meanwhile Marianne
Hoffman will be tenching in the
P.''Hdes ut Frnnkfot't, New York.
JOY IS BOUGHT
WITH SACRIFICE
THE G LEANER
UNDERGRADUATE OFFICERS
N oUY':JOA.N rtnG!RAlO YUtGINIA.!J-ONt sl_JCSfPHIMDROSICA 8AJt8AIItA MOOIU
The fo llowing at-e all the elec­tion
a-esu1ts in when Gl f'a ner
went to p.-~s.s.
t lndergraduate .-\ssoc.iation:
P1-es., Vit·ginin Jones: V. Pr-es.,
J osephine Rosien; Sec .. Barbara
Moot·e: Ta·e us., Ma1·y Joan Fitz ..
gcmld; Re~. Pt·es., Joan Monaco.
Sodality:
Pt·er., Rosemary Walke•·: V.
PPer., Jm1et Duvis; Sec., a orothy
Mulcuhy: Tt·eas., Margaret Mat­tom.
~lisj4ion8:
l't·er., Martha Mot-an: V. Pre!.,
J cn11 Scheg: Sec., Mat·y Ellen Cui·
linnn: Tl'eaa., Barbara Major.
:S FCCS:
Jeanne Orexelius, ) largaret
McCruth.
NSA:
Mary Lou Abel, B:wbt\l'a Major.
Catholic Action:
Leader and N FCCS Regional
Chairman, Jean Major.
Senior Class:
Pres., Patrit!ia O'Brien; C. Rep ..
Jean Major; Treas., Margaret
Mat)' Berr)•: V. Pres., Carolyn
Lortsch~r: s~ .. Jacqueline Barnes;
MISSION TOTAL MOUNTS
Jn the course of its existence
the Fremin MiSBion Unit or Naz­llreth
College has collected and
dist1·ibutcd to missioners in vari­ou~
Aelds a total of $12,190.78.
Since the unit was organiz.ed in
H.i27, this amount covet's a period
or 23 years. Tt has steadily ill·
creased so that in the past four
yea rs the tot.' l amount distrilr
ut.ed wtts $6.981.37. In the year
1950 alone, from J anuary to Dc­cemoor,
the record sets the tota l
nt $1,615.00, the highest in the
un it's history.
The succeaa or the ~·remin M is·
sion Unit's undertakings is due
wholly to the efl'ort or the stud·
entaof Nauorelh College, each or
whom is a member.
GET YOUR AIRING
JEAN SCHEG, '52
Now that spring is here, the
underclaasme.n can be seen trying
to iron out their winter kink&
with baseball and tennis. Even
though the days of gym elasse•
are over, some of the upperclass·
me.n can be sten about the tennis
courts.
1r you happen to look out a
window and see what looks like
Willium Tell it's probably Alire
Jlu,.holt?.. 1\Ut archery expett.
Allee is in charjfc of archery thi•
senson and is doing an excellent
,loh in spite of two slightly un­dcratrung
bows.
Fn• tho._ who like to ~.,.t th•ir
exe t"Cise indoot·s. badminton all'l
• table tennis equinmcn t is alwave;
nt you•· dis posal in the gym­nnRium.
Pari., Bemadetw Sentner; Si giJ.
lum. Joan Reichtu'i: Vtrity, AU«
Bucholtz.
J unior Class:
Pres., Kay Cun·an: C. ltep ..
t.{ar)' Hanis; TJ't'-38., Leona M(!i&·
enzahl; V. Pt·es., Helen Ann Mr·
Carthy; Sec., M:u·y Seth Heve·
ran: Ptu·l., Maa·ilyn Mnlleri
Gleaner. Betty Hnyrs.
Sophomore Class:
Pres., Cnrolyn Paciolln: C.
Rep., J on.n Battle; Trcns., Helen
Cullinan; V. P1-es .. June Quigler:
Sec .• Ann Cawer: Pnt·l., M~du
Bowman.
Athletic Association:
Pres .. Jeanette Lortscher.
Pr~s Rureau:
Officer, Jennne Mnrie Good·
speed.
Sociology Club:
Pres., Annemarie Duminuro;
V. Pres., Phyllis Kunz.
Dante Club:
Pres., Rose Ann Ch.iuppone:
V. Pres., Emma Lungo: Treu.,
Annemarie Dumi11uco: Sec., Flor­enre
DelRosso.
Student Check-up
I have fulfilled all my obliga­tions
as a Christian lltudent this
year. Yes 0 No 0
I have done each day's work
well, seeing in it the means of my
sanctification. Yes 0 No 0
1 have worked to discovct·
truth. not simply to get ~rood
marks or to receive the favot· ()f
my teachers and J>a1·cnts.
Yes 0 No 0
1 have kept the proper order in
my life, beginJting each day with
Moss and making a daily men·
tal praye•·. Yes 0 No 0
r have taken part ln all achool
a t"tivities to train myself and to
give pleasure to others.
Yes 0 No 0
I have recognized the value or
student government, been active
in its work and obeyed it.s regula·
lions. Yes 0 No 0
I have given others the benefi t
of my ll'aining by making my
home, my neighborhood, m)' par·
ish, my friend• more ~on.sclous of
their proper relationship to God.
Yes 0 No 0
(Why not clip this out and
keep it as a reminder for next
year?)
Dr. Phelan To Speak
Nazarelh's graduates of '51 will hear the Very Reverend
Gerald B. Phelan. Ph.D .. U..D., eminent philosopher. deliver
the Commencement Address on their great day. June sixth.
Dr. Phelan has done outstanding work in the fields of educa­tion
and philosophy, and is at present head of the Depart·
men! of Philosophy at Notre Dame.
COLLABORATED WITii Gll.SON
Dr. Phelan collaborated with Etienne Gilson (one of
Ncnareth'a most famous visiting lecturers) and with the Ba­ailian
Fathers at St. Michael"s College of Toronto in the
founding of the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies of
which Nazareth's Sister Teresa Marie was one of the orig­inal
members. In the second year of his presidency of t.he
Institute. it received a Papal Charter and was given the
power to granl special degrees. In 1946 he organized and
became director of the Mediaeval Institule of Noire Dame.
A FUll. CATHOUC CAREER
Dr, Phelcm. who has had a varied life. was born in Hali­fax.
N. S .. in 189·2. He began his cciololt)'
Club medina- on . . . ."
Tn lhe Biolo~~rv Lab:
uoo vou suooose Sisler is sro­in
«" to do some re.111Parch work
In the Librarv! She ..,nt us
on Another fteld trip for fire·
tliea."
1" I he T\lnn•l :
••Jt'" the '\\'RAT!!"
ln 118:
"Then vou've nil htArd about
,..n.ntie e'll1"""'~'" ,.nft r,.ltte hAir th,.
Jod i•• uaed in lhe '20'•. It i• or
•••cnce not true hair. ond be­lonll'•
to •ome other bein~r.
fCnmP~UmPa humnn." (Wow ­notnlocrv
wH ~ eoMmetics t.ht'Own
in for f1·rc.)
In 329:
.,Plan now fo1· vour· rutu•·e.
Hnrp lesson• $1.50 nnd up."
Buffalo Alumnae
Offer Scholarship
The Buffalo Chnpter of the
Nazal"\!th College Alumnae Auo­dalion
,,;.u a·wanl a one year
partial scholarship or one hun­dred
dollan to " resident or the
Buffalo area who will enwr th~
freshman class or Nazal"\!lh Col­lea-
e in September, 1951. This io
a new project for the group and
a scholarship committee ha8 been
O"~nized to make necessary a•··
rangements. llfrs. James F. To·
bin, Mrs. J ohn J . Burke, and th•
Misses Elizabeth Gcor~re, Loretta
Kercher ond Christine Wilson
w-ill serve on the commitlet.
On Sunday, June 17. tho Bur­ralo
Chapter will welcome the
19ol o:ratlu"les of the eollellt!
from the Buffa lo area at a nn•·ty
at the home of Migg Helm Ham·
mond.
Nazerene Is
Elected To Re9ional
NFCCS Office
Jeanne Drexelius has been
•lected bv the NFCCS rettional
council to be Recordin~t Secretar)'
or the Lake Erie Rettion lor
next year. Jeanne bas been Jun·
ior Delegate and served on a spe­cial
committee to evaluate com·
missions.
John Schoeneck, LeMoyne Col·
lege. is new President of lht'
Region. Oth•r offic:ers are: Maf\'
Frances McHugh (D'You,oille).
1st Vice-President: Robert 'Me·
Veigh (Niagara). 2nd Vice-Pres·
ident: \Frances Sullivan (Mercy·
hurst). Treasul"\!r.
These officers we"Ml elected dur·
in.or the Region NFCCS Congres•
held on our campus. Faculty and
students alike are to be com·
mended on the excellent eo11duct
of this meeti11g. Tt is certain that
those who took part nosscss "
more compleet sense of the rol•
of the student, both on his
can1pus and in h is parisll,
}lave- Vou }Ieard?
DOROTHY JABLONSKI, '52
Tt's just that time of the year
when you t ither have that
"abroad" reeling and dream of
sightseeing in far off enchanted
lands, or have the longing to live
in the sun lx;oide the sea during
those long hot summer after­noons-
Whispering Spring is
mnking a subtle crescendo into
summer, and those wished .. for
vacation days are almost here.
So, if you're fa.shion·wiae, you'll
breeze into summer with the lat­est
styles.
Cotton's the thing for every­thing
beach-bound or around the
town; and for after five. gleam­ing
cotton satins are becoming
popular. Lace, the at'lstoerat of
nl: fabl'ic.s, will be &ccn evcry­'''
here. lt1S the new summer star
-cool, feminine, and flattering.
Pretty as any ftower are the new
misty tissue chambrays tlnd ging­hams,
and the many so ft. sum­mery
prints. Many cheers for
aheers! Chiffons, voilea. organ­dies-
a]] arc Rower fresh and
petal perfect.
The vogue in coats is full still
but ,.;thin bounds, or narrowpiest choice of a
n1ajor in the 8ChooJ fOI' obviou•
reasons. Doo·cen 'Ruggieo·o. Th~'­mn
Pelusio, Terry Lombardo.
Rosemary &hoenherr, l\Jary Joan
Hart. Sally Stock, nnd Joan Mn­,
lCiolottY deo~rtnwnt: MA•·v
Ann Gaentler and Jean Cistemino
from the art department: Elsie
Conzalez from ~he sprrch dcpart­m~
nt: nnd Eileen Mulcahy, n
nurse.
Wt< can't figure out what it i•.
but maybe tenn1ing how to han­dle
people ho8 somethin~r to dn
with it. Sociology, herr we come!
ll'Youville HeQds L·R-C
01Youville College has secured
the national chairmanship of the
11ew Labor Relations Commission
or NFCCS whirh has been set up
lno·~rely through the efforts of th•
Ruffalo campus. Bec:ause or stud­~
nt interest, special courses, and
its location in a ~trent lndu•trial
renter. D'Youville has ooen ar­ceoted
for this honor and res-pon­oibility.
~tsy Quill will be na­tional
chuirmnn.
'rhe nims or the eommJSSJon
nrc mnni!old, and embo11ce both
an effort to make students
aware of the great need for lead­ership
in the labor fleld, and nn
Pffort to stimulate study of the
aocio-economic aspects of the
Papal Encyclicals.
We eongrotulnte our sister col­lege
on heo· etl'oo·ts to spread
Cho-istian social teaching and
may Joseph the Worker help her
In this project.
The student council or Nazo­o
·~th Colle~re has voted to set up n
sub-comml•sion of NFCCS on
Labor Relations.
Iars; ther've spo1·t shoo·t sleeves
big puff s leeves, or no sleeves nt
all. The redingote is coming in;
the tunic coat is can·)ting on; and
shaggy fleeces ao·e still "''ery­whare.
The oval silhouette in suits is
the newest cut of all. The trend
in dresses is sheath8 in hiding
behind long, swerving scnrves or
showing for n few measured
Inches under liCted overakirts. As
foo evening dresse&-any length
goes except to the ball, then it
must oo long und full oo· long nnd
ahenthy.
Crispness is the common dt­norninator
in fabrics. And for
coolness the leading colors are
go·ay oo· black - with - white or
white-with-black-80 much of it
everything else looks bright and
waml by contrast!
\Vhethcr you're in uncrowded
outdoor spaces or paying your
respects to the Festival of Brit­ain,
or dropping in on Paris' t\\·o­thousandth
bir·thday ]>arty, or
just plain loafing at the bench. ir
you keep an eye on your ward·
rob(;, you 'II stay on the sunn)'
side of summer.
Bachelors-To-Be
MARGARET MARY BERRY, '52
Didja hoppen to know thnt
our stald old Se11lon ure now
entering a special class called
"bachelors". Let's go back a few
years and see exactly what is im·
plied by that term. We have to
rder to a word that ~ts its or­ill'in
from Medieval Latin bacea­laure:
atus, which, in turn comes
from bnccalaureus, 1ncaning n
bachelor of art. Notice the pres.
ense of 'laurus', the Latin word
for laurel or honor. Webster, the
friend of the average collegienne
has defined the word bncealaure­ate
as "the degree of bachelor
conferred by uni ... ersities and eo1·
leges", and the word bachelor ao,
"one who has the first or lowest
academic degree conferred on him
b)" a college or university."
In modern univenities. the sig·
nificance of the degree of bache­lor
In relation to higheo· degrees,
varies. At Oxford and Cam­bridge
(don't all enroll at once)
th~ bachelor ean proceed to hit
mastership by simply retaining
hi• name on the books and paying
certain fees. At other univerai·
ties further examinations are
necessary. However, in no case
is the bachelor a full memoor of n
univers ity. Now in the light of
this knowledge we can look with
new reverence upon the Senion,
who come June will have the
add~d perfection (in the natural
order. or course) of bachelorhood,
that is, until they get their Mra.
(M.R.S.).
TH E GLEANER
As You
Like It
JOAN REICHART, '52
Monday evening, May H will
seu Johann Strauss' sparkling op­C:
t'tl, "F1edcrmuus" pa-csented ut..
the Eastman Theat1-c by the en­tire
company of tht< Metropolitan
Opera headed by a east of ita
top artists.
This pao·ticula1· o I' e r" hu•
achieved the distinction of being
lhe hit production or the entire
Met season' and has lx;en loudly
acclaimed by New Yo•·k co·itics
for its brillinnt east nnd vivacious
presentation.
In the leading rok,. will lx; Pa­~
rice Munsel, Margue.·ite l?iazzu,
Eugene Conley, Chal'les Kullman,
Jurnilla Novotna and John Brown­lea.
Jack Gilford will pro\ide the
comic interest in the role or the
jailer while Suzanne AnH~R, Puul
F'o·,mke nnd Hugh 1'hompson
complete the cast_
Engli•h Takes a Bow
For tho fi1·~t time since the Met
has lx;en making ita nnnual up­J>
earancf'S at the Eastman. the
opern will oo sung in English.
The new English Jy.-ics are by
Howard Dietz, Broadway plny­"'
right who feels that the Eng­lish
language is eminently rich
and singable and so rewrote the
Jyo·ics accoo-di11gly.
Because of its gay, madcup
nnvor, hFiede1-mau.s" is ranked
not only as the operatic su«ess
of the yenr but. as u musical com·
cdy success in competition with
Broadway's foremost stage at­traction.
s.
Here's one ll'IOl"C b1·iel note from
the Eastmnn. Mr. Ha t'Tison and
the Civic Oo·chestra will present
on Sundav. ~lay 6. an ever­popular
All- Gershwin Concert
featuring Concerto in F with pi­ano
soloist Alfo'ed Molllcdous tmd
soprano ooloist Ma.-ilyn Miller.
See t'or Yourself- ..
Have you eve1· wondered why
mother raved 80 about 'Rudolph
Valentino or Sada Thompson!
\Vetl, you needn't wuit fo1· their
screen biog.-aphica where you
only get a reasonable facsimile
but now you can ace and judge
{or yourself the very pictures,
tho origlnnl• that thrilled mom
so. Just take a trek to the Dry­den
Th•••""· recently opened pla)'­house
ndjncent to the George
Eastmon house and p1·esented lo
the public as part or the George
Eastman photography museum.
Here ever)' week lectures on pho·
tographie topics tire fcutured, but
the main nttraction aeems to oo
th~ •bowing of the old time
ugreat.a" headlining the matinee
idols of the 20's. Now at lust
you'\•e have the chance to tom·
pare Rudolph with Burt.
Any .tudent desiring
e job as camp
counselor this summer
plea se see
Sr. Eva Marie
Dip Into Mary Books
PAT RUTISHAUSER, '51
Truvele, yet beautiful ce•·e­mony,
the oriest In the presenc~
or th~ fnmily and friends b'~· .. ~
th~ ima¢e ~nd enthrones it in a
olace of honor. The fnmilv then
•·eeite• the Ctedo nnd each mem­ber
freely consecrates himself to
the Sacred Heart or Jesus.
The ceremony, howcvel', dots
not in itself fulfill the purpose of
the enthronenwnt. The family
must Ji,·e the enthronement, tht
consecrRtion: that is, they mu'1
nwke Christ the King and Center'
of a ll thci•· heuo·u.. They must ·
bring their joy!. their sorrows,
theio· probltr of 11\•t Iff' ..
te•·mine outsl~u1ding a Scheg - "Oo-oh, look
what's in the kitty!"
MAY DAY -
WED. MAY 9
Bring your
friends to
honor the Queen
T ~1E G L EANER
· The Room of Doom, May 23
ALICE M. BUCHOLTZ, '52
1'he morning bell dngs and it clangs and it clings
as you •·un back and forth on the floor,
J>i lling pens full with ink all the while ns you think
of the notes that you left by the door.
When you got to your seat your clean pa1>er looks neat
and you glance at the cJock on the wall,
Then the questions arrive-there are fifty plus five­and
the cl1oice isn't narrow at all.
0 you groan and you 1noan as you're chi lled to the bone,
Cor a cool breeze that's left from the night
Makes you•· papet's all fly, and you're .,;vondering why
you've a pen that engraves as it writes.
See the hands on the clock as it's saying tick tock
seem to wave and to waggle tres gay,
As your pen slips your hand and you see it's just g•·and
'cause it blotted your answtrs away.
And you reach to your face for that moment of g•·ace
when the Holy Ghost comes with a whirl.
llut how swell when you find that your neighbol' behind
Wl'ites like tnad- He's inspil'cd the '''t·ong girl!!
Then >•ou heal" a wild scream that might come in a dream
when a train plummets down in a show,
Rut it's •·eal ly a one who has finished! all done!!
and you've only five minutes! so speed ....
And you look once again and the thought me< youl' ken
that you've answered ten tnore than you 1 ~d.
Then vou're finished at last and you think that •u passrd,
why you mighl even manage a D!
Hut you reall1• resolved, when the stuff b'Cts involve-d,
you rnighl stot't lnrrnintl xo«'t it's because
she's ticklioh.
Shhley Moorhead w·as lhl' l't'·
cent guoot of Jeanne Plunkett
who by lhe wnyJ with t\'laritLIHit'
HolTman will bo Shil'le)''S b•·ido•·
mnids this summer.
Connie Costieh donned the
apron of hosteas ....,_ntly and en·
tertnined Norma Jean Cloos and
Elsie Gonule• nl •upper nt h~•·
home.
Returned fi'OIIl Florida u nd
s porting beautiful tnlls (gl'l')
Carol Hetzler and )larianne 1-lofl'·
man.
Kathleen Schueltr dro,·e tn
Brighton recenUy to pick up 3
box to all ostensible purposes
quite hono•·abll'. But it sounded
lnOI'e like bingo equipment. Oh
Kay!
.. rhe same nnmc, the same
amite, the same dnncing feet! \Ve
wtre reminded of the "Rockettes"
,,•hen we saw Joan Taylerc nnd
Joan ViJ(neri in S.R.O.
Sheila O'Grad)• oimply couldn't
miss nn opening bnseball game!
1t. just would_n't. luwc been open­ing
game withoul her.
Do we e\'er love Joanne Schu­macher's
tan! \Vi8h we rould a.U
go to Florida.
There are three very quiet jun·
iot•s who must nlwtlys be work·
ing out difficult. problems. z-\nn
Smy l cs~ Ann ll.eidml.\n nnd He·
lene Donnelly a 1·e tht·ee marty•·s
of the math depnt·iment.
If anyone wanlo Rill' help with
l>niology, be sure to see Berna·
deile Senlntr. She never refuses
to do anl•thing.
We unde,.,.tnnd Jeanne Mnrie
(~oodspeed and her fl'iend had a
good time in Cohorton a couple
or weeks ago.
Why is it that it is so hard lo
find )farilyn Spall. Jo f'risicano.
Flor<>noctry book
under her ~u-m.
Did you notice three smiling
faces at the glee club concert!
The)· were none other than Carol
Ra~~terty, Joan Hentges and
ll elen KorO'.
The Reid of soriology " ·ill l'eal·
I>' be improved when Jo Ros ica,
Shirley Mahler. Gina J ones, Jonn
Fagan. Annemarie OuminU(O and
llinda Doerr are given the chance
to actualize their potentialities.
Janet Davis and Phyllis Kun•
ce1'tainly at'C the good little man·
1\I;CI'S, 'fhei1• WOI'k on tickets fOI'
s.n.o., and May Dny nctivitie• is
highly commendable. They at·e n
perfect team in nnd out or school.
The secretaries very seldom re·
ceive the t:redit due them. When·
e\~er you want. .nny typing done.
you never get. no (or an answer.
Among out' able helpe•·s r,.om the
(}nss of '52 na·e Maria Lh•adas.
Mary l .ou Kenney. :\lary Kemof.
Je>an Jud ge. and Jacqueline
Barnes, our Be(ret.ary starlets.
THE GLEANER
SJ)C'nking o{ the U.S.O., Jeanne
Surdet has met a fellow just her
site.
Ho~emn1'Y Palmieri Jlluyccl host­ess
to llo•e Bozzette anti t,ucille
OeGori._ over the weekend, while
\lary Moran entertaintd Denise
Frey. lneid<>ntally, :'\ini is bear­ing
up well under the otrain of
bet"oming an nu1\t.
Jeuuellc Kuhn hus many rot·
lowers in S.R.O. • • well "" out­side.
Ann Stenglein oe•·ntched hN·
brother's car the othet· du)'. She
missed marring Nnture'a beauti·
ful tre•s. but hit the house.
Hose Ann J>atnella hnd been
worried about getting IH·ides­mnid's
dresses, but don't worry
they were only !or S.R.O.
lntert~tintr lnterro~atious:
Did you know thnt Eunic.,
IJradley is teandcd hc1· lnl(\Rt int.ercRt